Elgar Parishad Case: Arun Ferreira Moves Bombay HC Seeking Default Bail

Ferreira’s petition came up for hearing on Friday before a division bench of Justices Revati Mohite Dere and Sharmila Deshmukh. The former recused herself from hearing the plea without assigning any reason.

Mumbai: Activist Arun Ferreira, one of the accused in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case, has approached the Bombay high court seeking a default bail on parity with co-accused Sudha Bharadwaj, who was granted relief in December 2021.

Ferreira’s petition came up for hearing on Friday before a division bench of Justices Revati Mohite Dere and Sharmila Deshmukh.

Justice Dere, however, recused from hearing the plea without assigning any reason. The petition will now be placed before another bench.

The activist in his petition filed through advocate Satyanarayanan R. said his case stands on par with that of Bharadwaj, who was granted default bail by the high court.

“The only distinguishing factor is that while the applicant (Ferreira) filed the default bail application (in the lower court) on the 94th day, co-accused Sudha Bharadwaj filed it on the 91st day,” the plea stated.

The high court while granting default bail to Bharadwaj held that the Pune sessions court that had granted an extension of time to the Pune police for filing the chargesheet after the mandatory 90 days period for the same was over, did not have the jurisdiction to do so.

“The benefits of this finding needs to be extended to this applicant (Ferreira) as well. Thus, if the special court order is held to be without jurisdiction, then the benefit accorded to Sudha Bharadwaj ought to be extended to the present applicant too,” the petition said. The high court, while rejecting to grant default bail in December 2021 to the other eight accused, had held that they had not exercised their right to seek default bail in time.

It had observed that while Bharadwaj had filed a plea before the Pune court seeking default bail as soon as the 90 days period for filing the chargesheet ended, these eight accused had delayed filing their applications.

Ferreira was arrested in August 2018 and booked under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and the Indian Penal Code (IPC) for waging war against the nation, being a member of a banned terror outfit CPI (Maoist) and propagating Maoist ideology.

As per his plea, in September 2018 Ferreira filed an application seeking default bail before the special court in Pune.

In June 2019, a common application was filed by Ferreira and eight other accused in the case for default bail on the ground that the special court in Pune did not have the jurisdiction to take cognisance of the chargesheet filed by the Pune police, which was initially probing the case.

In September 2019, this common application was rejected by the court. The nine accused then approached the Bombay high court in appeal. In December 2021, the high court granted default bail only to Bharadwaj, but rejected the pleas of the others.

The accused then filed a review petition which was also rejected by the high court this year. Following this, Ferreira filed a petition seeking default bail.

The case relates to alleged inflammatory speeches delivered at the Elgar Parishad conclave, held at Shaniwarwada in Pune on December 31, 2017, which the police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial located on the city’s outskirts. The Pune Police, which probed the case before it was transferred to the National Investigation Agency, claimed the conclave was backed by Maoists.

(PTI)

Of 16 Arrested Accused in Elgar Parishad Case, One Dead, Two Out on Bail and Rest in Jail

With the Supreme Court stipulating that charges in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case be framed within the next three months, the focus has shifted now to the status of the accused.

Mumbai: With the Supreme Court stipulating that charges in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case be framed within the next three months, the focus has shifted now to the status of the accused.

In the case that is being probed by the National Investigation Agency (NIA), of the total 16 arrested accused, Jesuit priest Stan Swamy died at a private hospital here last year during judicial custody, while Telugu poet Varavara Rao is currently out on medical bail.

Only one accused – Sudha Bharadwaj – is out on regular bail, which was granted to her by the Bombay high court in December last year, while 13 other accused are currently lodged in different jails.

The accused in the case have been charged with waging war against the nation, being active members of the banned terror outfit CPI (Maoist), criminal conspiracy and indulging in acts with an intent to strike terror in the minds of people using explosive substances.

The NIA in its draft charges sought to charge the accused under various provisions of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The court is yet to frame charges in the case, only after which trial would commence.

The case relates to alleged inflammatory speeches delivered at the Elgar Parishad conclave, held at Shaniwarwada in Pune on December 31, 2017, which the police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial located on the city’s outskirts. The Pune Police, which probed the case before it was transferred to the NIA, claimed the conclave was backed by Maoists.

What is the status of the accused persons arrested in the case?

Activist Sudhir Dhawale was one of the first people to be arrested in the case in June 2018. He is presently lodged at the Taloja prison and has been accused of being an active member of the terror outfit. In July this year, a special NIA court rejected his bail plea.

Activist Rona Wilson was arrested in June 2018 from his home in Delhi and has been in jail since then. He has been described as one of the top brass of urban Maoists. His bail plea was rejected by the special court in July 2022. Wilson was granted temporary bail for 14 days by the special NIA court in September 2021 to attend a mass organised for the 30th-day ritual following his father’s death. He surrendered at the end of the 14-day period.

Lawyer Surendra Gadling was arrested in 2018 and has been in jail since then. According to the NIA, Gadling is an active member of CPI (Maoist) and was involved in the fund-raising activities and disbursement of the same. NIA also alleged that Gadling guided the violence at Koregaon Bhima in Pune. He too was refused bail by the special court in July 2022.

Professor Shoma Sen was arrested in June 2018 and has been lodged in the Byculla women’s prison since then. She had in 2021 sought bail on medical grounds and rising COVID-19 cases. The special NIA court, however, rejected her bail plea. In July 2022, the court also rejected her plea seeking default bail.

Activist Mahesh Raut is accused of spreading Maoist ideology and attempting to recruit students to join the Naxalite movement. It is alleged by the NIA that Raut had passed on Rs 5 lakh to the co-accused in the case for the Elgar Parishad event. He was arrested in 2018 and is still behind bars. His default bail plea was rejected by the special court this year.

Eighty-two-year-old Telugu poet Varavara Rao was granted medical bail by the Supreme Court on August 10, 2022. Last year, the Bombay high court granted him temporary bail on medical grounds. He was arrested in August 2018 and was in jail till February 2021 when HC granted him temporary bail. He is accused of being a senior and active member of the banned group.

Social activist and lawyer Arun Ferreira was arrested in the case in August 2018 and is presently lodged at the Taloja prison. He had sought default bail in the case but it was rejected by both the special court and the Bombay high court in February this year. Ferreira is accused of taking an active part in the Maoist movement.

Vernon Gonsalves was arrested in the case in August 2018 and is presently lodged at the Taloja prison. His bail plea was rejected by both the special court and the high court following which he approached the Supreme Court seeking bail.

Activist Sudha Bharadwaj is the only accused in the case who is out on default bail that was granted to her by the Bombay high court in December 2021. She was arrested in August 2018 and was in jail till December 2021 when she was released on bail. As per NIA, Bharadwaj was an active member of CPI (Maoist).

Anand Teltumbde, an activist and scholar, was arrested by the NIA in April 2020 after he surrendered following no relief of anticipatory bail from the Supreme Court. He is presently lodged at the Taloja prison and his bail plea has been rejected by the special court.

Seventy-year-old activist Gautam Navlakha was arrested in the case in August 2018 and has been lodged at the Taloja prison since then. In October 2021, he was shifted to the Anda Cell (high-security barracks) and has been kept in solitary confinement since then, his partner Sahba Husain claimed.

Delhi University associate professor, Hany Babu was arrested in July 2020 in the case and is presently lodged at the Taloja prison. He recently moved HC seeking bail which is yet to be heard. The NIA has accused Babu of being a co-conspirator in propagating Maoist activities and ideology on the instructions of CPI (Maoist) leaders.

Jesuit priest Stan Swamy, 83, died while in judicial custody. He had sought medical bail from the HC. Pending hearing of the same, he was shifted to a private hospital where he died on July 5, 2021. He was arrested by the NIA in October 2020 and was lodged at the Taloja prison till he was shifted to a private hospital in May 2021.

Sagar Gorkhe, a singer and anti-caste activist, was arrested by the NIA in September 2020. He is presently lodged at the Taloja prison.

Ramesh Gaichor was arrested by the NIA along with Gorkhe and is also lodged at the Taloja prison. The duo is accused of being part of a group that organised the Elgar Parishad meeting where inflammatory speeches were made.

Jyoti Jagtap, a member of the Kabir Kala Manch, was arrested in September 2020 on the charge of propagating Naxalite activities and Maoist ideology. She is presently lodged at the Byculla women’s prison in Mumbai.

(PTI)

‘Neglect’: US Commission on International Religious Freedom Condemns Stan Swamy’s Death

‘Father Stan Swamy’s death is a stark reminder of the egregious and ongoing persecution of India’s religious minority communities.’

Washington: A federal American body has condemned the “deliberate neglect” by the government of India that it said led to the death of Jesuit priest Stan Swamy.

Swamy, 84, who was arrested last year under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) in alleged connection with the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case, died at a Mumbai hospital on Monday.

“Father Stan Swamy’s death is a stark reminder of the egregious and ongoing persecution of India’s religious minority communities,” Nadine Maenza, chair of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) said in a statement on Wednesday.

The USCIRF condemns “in strongest terms the deliberate neglect and targeting by the government of India that led to the death of Father Stan Swamy,” it said.

Maenza urged the United States to hold the Indian government accountable and to raise religious freedom concerns in the US-India bilateral relationship.

Rejecting mounting international criticism over the handling of the case of Swamy, India on Tuesday said the concerned authorities act against violations of law and do not restrain the legitimate exercise of rights.

Also read: Darkness at Noon: Stan Swamy’s Death Is Testimony to the Judiciary’s Decline

The Ministry of External Affairs said India remains committed to the promotion and protection of the human rights of all its citizens and that the country’s democratic polity is complemented by an independent judiciary and a range of national and state-level human rights commissions.

“Swamy was arrested and detained by the National Investigation Agency following due process under the law. Because of the specific nature of charges against him, his bail applications were rejected by the courts. Authorities in India act against violations of law and not against legitimate exercise of rights. All such actions are strictly in accordance with the law, the MEA said in a statement in New Delhi.

It said Swamy was receiving all possible medical attention at a private hospital where he was admitted since May 28. His health and medical treatment were being closely monitored by the courts. He passed away on July 5 following medical complications.

“India remains committed to promotion and protection of human rights of all its citizens, the ministry said in response to media queries.

India had earlier rejected its criticism by the USCIRF, terming its observations on the condition of minorities and religious freedom in the country as biased and tendentious .

The MEA had termed the USCIRF as an “organisation of particular concern” in 2020 and said it will treat it accordingly.

USCIRF Commissioner Anurima Bhargava said that the commission is deeply saddened and appalled by the death of Swamy.

For years, he fought for the rights and dignity of low-caste and poor people across India, she said.

Father Swamy died in the custody of Indian authorities who targeted him for giving voice to the human rights concerns of Adivasis and other low-caste, religious and poor communities,” she said.

“The Indian government held him for these past months, without any trial or conviction, despite lack of credible evidence on the charges filed against him, his deteriorating health, and global calls for his release, Bhargava added.

(Lalit K. Jha)

Darkness at Noon: Stan Swamy’s Death Is Testimony to the Judiciary’s Decline

A key reason the political establishment is so emboldened to pursue cases under UAPA against individuals like the 84-year-old activist is the weak judiciary we have today.

It has been 81 years since Arthur Koestler’s Darkness at Noon was first published. The novel is set in the backdrop of the Great Purge of the late 1930s in the Soviet Union under Stalin. This period was marked by, among other things, political repression, police surveillance, general suspicion of the opposition, imprisonment, and executions. Decades on, thousands of miles away, darkness fell at noon in India too, when Father Stan Swamy passed away at a private hospital in Mumbai on July 5. Ominously reminiscent of the macabre world Koestler had drawn, Fr Swamy’s death is much more than the death of an activist accused of terrorist activities. It is the result of a systemic abuse of majoritarian authority and disregard for the rule of law.

For many, Fr Swamy will be remembered as an inspiration. A Jesuit priest, he chose to make the upliftment of marginalised communities in Jharkhand his life’s work. He lived and worked in a single room, prolifically writing (over 70 books are credited to him) on dispossessed people. He was an activist for most of his life, and used the legal system to fight for the rights of those who were being unfairly targeted, and thought that the constitution would help in securing justice, even moving the Jharkhand high court in a public interest litigation on undertrials. When doing all of this, surely, he would never have imagined that his fate would be decided by the very system he used and believed in.

It started in August 2018, when the Pune police raided Fr Swamy’s single-room home, seized his computer, cell phone, books and some classical music cassettes. Another raid took place in June 2019. Finally, on October 8, 2020, Fr Swamy was arrested by the National Investigation Agency (NIA), under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), the 16th to join a roster of professors, activists, writers, and public intellectuals, as a suspect in the Bhima Koregaon case. Fr Swamy, aged over 80, remained an accused, in the custody of the state, till his death. Besides being arrested for what many believe to be improbable causes, and being possibly the oldest person ever accused of terrorism in India, the most tragic story is how his detention was handled by the state, by the police and worst of all, by the courts.

Fr Swamy was arrested on flimsy evidence of some propaganda material and communication with other activists in the field, such as Sudha Bharadwaj and Varavara Rao, who were also arrested for similar charges. The authenticity of some of the allegedly indiciting documentation, including a key report, has been questioned by international forensic data experts. But the state defended its arrest arguing that these issues must be gone into only during trial, and that the accused — i.e., Fr Swamy — should remain in jail until then.

The 16 arrested in connection with the Elgar Parishad-Bhima Koregaon case. Photo: The Wire

This is the outcome also of the problematic Watali judgment, which I discuss in subsequent paragraphs. Repeated pleas for medical assistance by Fr Swamy were consistently ignored or dismissed. Medical reports taken on record clearly showed that Fr Swamy had the degenerative Parkinson’s disease, and could not even do basic tasks, such as holding a spoon, writing, walking or bathing. Indeed, the court noted that he had a severe hearing problem, and was physically very weak. But even that did not move them. Every regular bail application that was filed by his lawyers was unequivocally rejected. When he applied for medical bail, the court kept adjourning the matter, and merely offered him the services of a private hospital. In my opinion, this demonstrates a lack of sensitivity on the part of the judges, which is deeply saddening.

Also Read: Father Stan Swamy Always Looked On the Bright Side of Life

Testimony to judicial decline

The series of events that led to Fr Swamy’s eventual and tragic passing is testimony to the judicial decline that we have seen in recent years, which coincidentally or not, appears to be coterminous with the current political regime in India.

Why is the political establishment, and the police, so emboldened to pursue cases under UAPA against individuals like Fr Swamy? A key reason, undoubtedly, is the weak judiciary we have today. Indeed, our judiciary today suffers from a great many flaws besides mere weakness. In Fr Swamy’s case, the judges displayed apathy of a shocking order. It is perplexing when, on the one hand, the chief justice of India grandiloquently states that personal liberties and fundamental rights must be protected, courts do precisely the opposite.

It would not be too bold to suggest that the idea of the “presumption of innocence” – a central principle of criminal law and procedure – is on a terribly weak footing these days in our country, and this should worry all of us greatly.

The source of this worry is the Supreme Court of India itself. Its April 2019 decision in National Investigation Agency vs Zahoor Ahmad Shah Watali on the interpretation of UAPA has affected all downstream decisions involving the statute. This decision has created a new doctrine, which is that effectively, an accused must remain in custody throughout the period of the trial, even if it is eventually proven that the evidence against the person was inadmissible, and the accused is finally acquitted. The illogic of this veers on the absurd: Why must an accused remain in jail only to be eventually acquitted?

According to the decision, in considering bail applications under UAPA, courts must presume every allegation made in the first information report to be correct. Further, bail can now be obtained only if the accused produces material to contradict the prosecution. In other words, the burden rests on the accused to disprove the allegations, which is virtually impossible in most cases. The decision has essentially excluded the admissibility of evidence at the stage of bail. By doing so, it has effectively excluded the Evidence Act itself, which arguably makes the decision unconstitutional. Bail hearings under UAPA are now nothing more than a mere farce. With such high barriers of proof, it is now impossible for an accused to obtain bail, and is in fact a convenient tool to put a person behind bars indefinitely. It is nothing short of a nightmare come true for arrestees.

Supreme Court of India. Photo: PTI

An abused provision

This is being abused by the government, police and prosecution liberally: now, all dissenters are routinely implicated under (wild and improbable) charges of sedition or criminal conspiracy and under UAPA. Due to the Supreme Court judgment, high courts have their hands tied, and must perforce refuse bail, as disproving the case is virtually impossible. As a result of this decision, for instance, a high court judge can no longer really adjudicate and assess the evidence in a case. All cases must now follow this straitjacketed formula of refusing bail. The effect is nearly identical to the draconian preventive detention laws that existed during the Emergency, where courts deprived people access to judicial remedy. If we want to prevent the disasters of that era, this decision must be urgently reversed or diluted, otherwise we run the risk of personal liberties being compromised very easily.

The most flagrant abuse of UAPA, and constant rejection of bail applications of those accused as a means of silencing opposing voices, can be seen in the Bhima Koregaon cases, including Fr Swamy’s case, as well as the cases pertaining to protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), where mere thought is elevated to a crime. In multiple instances, evidence is untenable, sometimes even arguably planted, and generally weak overall. But as a consequence of UAPA being applied, the accused cannot even get bail. Courts cannot go into the merits of the case due to the Supreme Court judgment.

Also Read: Killing Him Softly With His Song: A Requiem for Father Stan Swamy

When courts do go into such matters, as in the instance of the Delhi high court granting bail to three young activists accused in a conspiracy relating to the 2020 riots in Delhi, the Supreme Court uncharacteristically decides to weigh in. The Supreme Court reportedly expressed “surprise” and dissatisfaction at the high court’s decision, giving the direction that the decision will “not to be treated as precedent by any court” to give similar reliefs.

Specifically, the Supreme Court reportedly said that “in a bail application, a 100-page judgment discussing all laws is surprising us”, perhaps forgetting that the case that started it all, i.e., the Watali judgment of the Supreme Court, was itself a judgment in a bail matter!

This seems to imply that only the Supreme Court can hold forth on matters of statutory interpretation, and that high courts – which are constitutional courts in their own right – may not? By extension, if statutes ought not to be examined at all by High Courts, does this mean that individual arrestees must languish in jail till, say, the constitutional validity of the statutes under which they are arrested are decided? Surely, this would be completely irrational.

Posterity will blame the judiciary for the incarceration and unfortunate death of Fr Swamy, and the continued imprisonment of so many others like him. But voices will continue to rise in protest. As Fr Swamy himself said, though, “We will still sing in the chorus. A caged bird can still sing.”

A version of this article is also being published by The Hindu.

Ajit Prakash Shah is former chief justice, Delhi high court and former chairperson, Law Commission of India.

Bombay HC Asks NIA to File Reply on Sudha Bharadwaj’s Bail Plea

Bharadwaj had sought default bail, contending the trial judge was not authorised to take cognisance of the 2019 charge sheet filed against her.

Mumbai: The Bombay high court on Tuesday, June 22, directed the National Investigation Agency to file its affidavit by July 3 in response to the bail petition of activist Sudha Bharadwaj, in jail since August 28, 2018.

Bharadwaj is one of 16 that the National Investigation Agency has incarcerated as accused in the Elgar Parishad case and booked under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).

Bharadwaj had sought default bail, contending the trial judge was not authorised to take cognisance of the 2019 charge sheet filed against her, as the judge was at that time not designated as special judge under the NIA Act to hear matters pertaining to the UAPA.

A division bench of Justices S.S. Shinde and N.J. Jamadar on Tuesday directed NIA’s advocate Sandesh Patil to file an affidavit in response to the petition and posted the matter for further hearing on July 3.

As The Wire has reported before, in her petition, Bharadwaj relied on documents received from the high court under the Right to Information (RTI) Act to demonstrate that the court of Additional Sessions Judge Kishor Vadane in Pune was not authorised to take cognisance of the 1,800-page supplementary charge sheet filed by the Pune police in February 2019.

“This judge was not designated as a special NIA judge at the time and hence, could not have taken cognisance of the charge sheet. We are also challenging an earlier order passed by this judge in November 2018 granting the police time to file the charge sheet,” Bharadwaj’s counsel Yug Chaudhry argued.

The case relates to alleged inflammatory speeches delivered at the ”Elgar Parishad” conclave, held at Shaniwarwada in Pune on December 31, 2017, which Pune Police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial located on the city”s outskirts. Police have also claimed Maoist links to the incident.

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) later took over the probe into the case.

(With PTI inputs)

‘Trial Judge Not Authorised’: Sudha Bharadwaj Moves Bombay HC For Default Bail

Additional Sessions Judge Kishor Vadane, Bharadwaj has argued in her plea, was not authorised to take cognisance of Pune Police’s supplementary chargesheet against her under the NIA Act.

New Delhi: Sudha Bharadwaj, one of the 16 held over what law enforcement believes is their connection with the Elgar Parishad case, has approached the Bombay high court seeking default bail over the contention that the trial judge was not authorised to take cognisance of a 2019 chargesheet against her.

LiveLaw has reported that Bharadwaj, a lawyer and activist, has sought to demonstrate in an application filed under Section 167(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure that the court of Additional Sessions Judge Kishor Vadane was not authorised to take cognisance of Pune Police’s supplementary chargesheet against her.

The section of the CrPC stipulates on jurisdiction of a judge and limitations this places on the nature of orders she can make.

Bharadwaj has cited Right to Information request replies to support her point. She has pleaded that this means that the judge could not have granted the Pune Police an extension to file the chargesheet either. The case is now being investigated by the National Investigation Agency.

The extension was granted on November 26, 2018, and Pune Police filed the chargesheet on February 21, 2019.

Bharadwaj’s plea says that the Additional Sessions Judge’s court was not the designated special court under the National Investigation Agency Act, which has exclusive jurisdiction to try scheduled offences, including those under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act.

Justice Sarang Kotwal, hearing the plea on Friday, asked for the petition to be placed before a division bench, LiveLaw reported.

In May, family members of the activists jailed in the Elgar Parishad case, including Sudha Bharadwaj’s, wrote a letter to Maharashtra chief minister Uddhav Thackeray, seeking their release from prisons in view of the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

Last year, Bharadwaj’s family had expressed grave worry at her condition and the deterioration of her health in jail.

Last year, as the first wave of the pandemic raged the National Investigation Agency had said that the aged trade unionist who suffers from diabetes and hypertension has been “taking undue benefit of the pandemic” in appealing for bail and opposed her plea.

NIA Court Allows Jailed Activist Sudha Bharadwaj to Access Five Books a Month

Special judge D.E. Kothalikar said the lawyer will be allowed to access books from outside the Byculla prison, but only after the superintendent “carefully” examines them for “objectionable content”.

New Delhi: A special NIA court has allowed lawyer and activist Sudha Bharadwaj, who is in custody for her alleged involvement in the Bhima Koregaon case, to access five books a month from outside the Byculla prison.

According to a report in The Hindu, special judge D.E. Kothalikar directed the Byculla district prison’s superintendent to “carefully examine the books” for objectionable content.

“The Superintendent shall carefully examine the books and if they contain objectionable material, which preaches violence, vulgar, obscene, pornographic or the material propagating the banned organisation namely Revolutionary Democratic Front or CPI (Maoist), in that case he shall not allow the applicant [Bharadwaj] to accept such books,” the court said.

Bharadwaj is among several activists and lawyers who were arrested by the Pune Police in the Elgar Parishad case in 2018. In 2020, the case was transferred to the National Investigating Agency (NIA), which has subsequently arrested more activists and academics, with the most recent ones being Delhi University professor Hany Babu and tribal rights activist Stan Swamy.

In November, a parcel containing two kurtas and one book for Bharadwaj was sent to the prison. However, the prison authorities removed the book, The Empire of Cotton by Sten Backert from the parcel. The following month, lawyers representing Bharadwaj along with co-accused in the Elgar Parishad case, Babu and Gautam Navlakha, approached the special NIA court seeking access to books and newspapers in prison.

Navlakha sought two books, The World Of Jeeves and Wooster by P.G. Wodehouse and Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States by James C. Scott while Babu asked for A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman, Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh and Last Train to Istanbul by Ayse Kulin.

The Bombay high court slammed Taloja prison officials in early December 2020 when they refused to accept new spectacles that were sent by his family in a courier. Navlakha has very poor eyesight and is near blind without the aid of his prescription glasses.

The court had said that there is a need to conduct a workshop for jail officials to sensitise them on the needs of prisoners.

In the case of Stan Swamy, lawyers had to move the court seeking permission for him to use a straw and sipper in prison to drink water, as he cannot hold a glass because he has Parkinson’s disease. The Taloja jail authorities obliged, but after nearly one month.

Also read: Arnab Goswami and Varavara Rao, Unequal Citizens Before the Law

On Wednesday, the Bombay high court heard a plea by Varavara Rao’s wife and asked the NIA and the state prison authorities to take into account the age and health of the Telugu poet. “The petitioner is above 80. Keep in mind his age and health conditions. While making submissions on the bail plea, reflect on his health. We are all humans, this is an issue about his health,” Justice Shinde said.

A file image of Varavara Rao.

The plea said that prison authorities had neglected to provide the 80-year-old with appropriate medical attention since 2018.

In November last year, the high court had allowed Rao to seek treatment in Mumbai’s Nanavati Hospital for 15 days which was later extended by the court. It observed that Rao was almost on his death bed and deserved proper care.

During his time in jail, Rao has sustained a head injury, tested positive for COVID-19 and is possibly suffering from dementia. Family members have said that his weight has dropped drastically.

Supreme Court Refuses to Entertain Sudha Bharadwaj’s Bail Plea

“You have a good case on merits. Why don’t you file a regular bail application?” the bench said, in response to a petition seeking bail on medical grounds.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Thursday refused to entertain a plea seeking bail to lawyer and activist Sudha Bharadwaj, who has been detained in the Bhima Koregaon case that is being probed by the National Investigation Agency (NIA).

A bench comprising Justices U.U. Lalit and Ajay Rastogi dismissed as withdrawn the plea filed by Bharadwaj.

Advocate Vrinda Grover, appearing for the petitioner, submitted that the activist has been in jail for over two years and charges have not been not framed in the case.

Nothing has been recovered from the petitioner and no incriminating material found, she said.

Referring to her health condition, the lawyer said Bharadwaj is suffering from diabetes and other comorbidities.

“They are giving me medicine but several tests are required. Grant me interim bail. I will get diagnosed myself and thereafter surrender myself,” she said.

The apex court noted that a bail plea is pending in the high court.

Grover said that she sought the court’s indulgence to get checked and the tests cannot happen in the jail hospital.

“You have a good case on merits. Why don’t you file a regular bail application?” the bench said.

The court then said, “either you withdraw it or we will dismiss it” and suggested that a regular bail plea can be filed.

The plea was then withdrawn.

Bharadwaj, 58, had earlier approached the Bombay high court seeking bail, saying that she suffered from chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension.

She had said comorbidities put her at a higher risk of contracting the coronavirus while at the Byculla women’s prison, where an inmate had tested positive for COVID-19 earlier.

The court, however, had noted the submissions made by the NIA and the Maharashtra government that the prison authorities were taking all precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and that they were providing necessary medical care to Bharadwaj for her comorbidities.

On August 21, pursuant to a high court order, the state government had submitted a report stating that Bharadwaj had been examined in the prison by a medical officer and that her health condition was found to be “stable and satisfactory”.

The report stated that Bharadwaj’s vital health parameters were stable although she had been suffering from mild depression and had complained of body ache.

The state said that Bharadwaj had been given medication for dizziness and had been advised to continue medicines for her chronic conditions.

Bharadwaj has been lodged in the Byculla women’s prison since September 2018 following her arrest in the case.

Rights Bodies Urge President Kovind to Note Several Blatant Human Rights Violations

The signatories to a memorandum have called for the release of intellectuals, writers, professors, students, anti-CAA activists implicated in the Elgar Parishad case and for the February Delhi violence.

New Delhi: The PUCL (People’s Union for Civil Liberties), Janhastakshep and Citizens for Democracy have collectively authored a letter to President Ram Nath Kovind, urging the release of intellectuals, writers, professors, students, anti-CAA activists implicated in the Elgar Parishad case and for the February Delhi violence. The signatories have also requested the repeal of the Citizenship Amendment Act and Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, along with the restoration of Articles 370 and 35A in Jammu and Kashmir.

“On behalf of our civil liberty organizations we bring to your kind notice the alarming situation in the country. In the midst of growing poverty and unemployment coupled with the miseries wrought by the present pandemic, the state apparatus is busy in making continuous assault on the fundamental rights of the people,” the letter says.

People’s Union for Civil Liberties is a human rights body formed in India in 1976 by socialist leader Jayaprakash Narayan. Janhastakshep is a people’s intervention group “against fascism.”

The three organisations had planned to hold a demonstration on Friday at Jantar Mantar to raise these demands. However, they were informed a day before, that the gathering for demonstration would not be allowed due to restrictions imposed on account of COVID-19.

Also read: Elgar Parishad Case: NIA Summons Three Lawyers for Questioning

The participants of the protest had been informed about this, however, two protesters, unaware of the latest circular had reached Jantar Mantar and held banners with their demands. According to the protesters, there was heavy police presence. Amit Srivastava, one of the protesters, was taken away by police in a van. When PUCL head N.D. Pancholi reached the spot, police told him, “We will neither allow any banner nor any protester. Not even a single protester would be allowed.”

According to Pancholi, the protest spot at Jantar Mantar was surrounded by police barricades on all sides. Srivastava was later released by the police. “Even though we couldn’t protest, we were allowed to submit our memorandum to the President of India.” 

The memorandum further read, “Large number of young students are being falsely implicated for participating in peaceful protests against Citizens Amendment Act,2019. The real culprits involved in inciting the recent violence in Delhi are moving freely and victims of the violence are being made accused. The police in Delhi under the control of the Home Minister at the Centre is being misused against innocent social activists and members of the minority community.”

Also read: Amnesty Report Accuses Delhi Police of Torture, Violence, Serious Rights Violations During Riots

Referring to the investigation by Delhi police into the Delhi riots, the letter says, “The proceedings relating to the recent Delhi violence pending in various courts is sought to be manipulated towards one particular end – even a court had expressed its surprise the way the Delhi police is proceeding violating the established procedures and norms for fair investigation.”

Talking about BJP leaders Kapil Mishra and Anurag Thakur, the letter further accused Delhi police of protecting them. There has been no complaint registered against either yet. “The political leaders who openly expressed provocative communal slogans against members of a minority community and peaceful anti-CAA protesters and who did their most to incite the violence are being unashamedly protected,” it said.

Referring to the arrests of Anand Teltumbde, Sudha Bhardwaj, Gautam Navlakha, Varavara Rao, Arun Ferreira and Vernon Gonsalves, it said, “The situation relating to human rights prevailing all over India is also very dismal. Intellectuals, writers, human right activists, journalists, who raise their voices in favour of the downtrodden, weak and minorities are sought to be silenced by implicating them in false cases. About 12 such academicians, writers, professors, human right activists, advocates are in prison of the last many months, some of them even going to complete two years of detention… Two years have passed but even charges have not been framed in court. In this manner it might take decades for the case to reach final conclusion. UAPA is being flagrantly misused for arresting the innocents and keeping them in jail for years.”

Also read: Sudha Bharadwaj Diagnosed With Heart Disease, ‘Triggered by Stress of Jail Stay,’ Says Daughter

Calling the CAA and the reading down of Article 370 in Kashmir “calculated attempts to destroy our constitutional values,” the letter further called it an “assault on our constitution” and said that the action violates all values enshrined in our “glorious humanist traditions.”

The letter also criticised the media for “competing with each other in spreading hate and venom against one community to the enjoyment of concerned governmental agencies whose task is to curb hateful campaigns.”

Chhattisgarh False FIR Case: NHRC Awards Compensation to Nandini Sundar, Others

The commission’s order was dated March 13, but reached the complainant only last month. In the same order, monetary compensation was also awarded to the members of a fact finding team of lawyers from Telangana.

New Delhi: In a case concerning the registration of a first information report (FIR) against Nandini Sundar, Archana Prasad, Sanjay Parate and three others, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has awarded monetary compensation for suffering “great mental pain and agony as a result of false FIRs against them by the police.”

In its order dated March 13, which was received by the complainant (the People Union of Civil Liberties or PUCL) only last month, the commission has directed the Chhattisgarh state government to pay Rs 1 lakh to each of them. “During the course of [the] investigation, it was found that there is no case made out against these six persons and, therefore, their names were deleted from the FIR in which their names were initially included,” read the order.

“In our considered opinion, these persons would have certainly suffered a great mental pain and agony as a result of the registration of false FIRs against them by the police, which is a violation of their human rights,” added the order while directing the state government, through the chief secretary, to pay the compensation within a period of six weeks.

The chief secretary of Chhattisgarh, Rajendra Prasad Mandal, told The Wire, “I have instructed the home secretary to take up the matter.” However, the individuals concerned are yet to receive any communication from the state government.

Also Read: Chhattisgarh Police Drop Charges Against Nandini Sundar and Co-Accused

‘Not received any communication’

Speaking to The Wire, one of the individuals awarded the compensation said that none of the six persons have received any communication from the Chhattisgarh government so far. They are planning to write to the government. “We welcome the NHRC order and hope that the Chhattisgarh government will act promptly to redress the repetitional loss and mental agony suffered by us,” read a joint statement by them.

“We hope that the police officials responsible for filing false charges against us, especially then IG Bastar S.R.P. Kalluri will be investigated and prosecuted. The false charges were filed immediately after the CBI indicted SPOs and Salwa Judum leaders under Kalluri’s command for the burning of the villages of Tadmetla, Timapuram and Morpalli as well as the murderous attack on Swami Agnivesh in 2011,” they added.

Police officer S.R.P. Kalluri. Credit: PTI

Thanking the PUCL for taking up their case with the NHRC, the statement further noted that the organisation has taken up many cases “human rights defenders” in Chhattisgarh. “It is deeply distressing that PUCL secretary and advocate Sudha Bhardwaj who took up such cases in Chhattisgarh has herself been arrested under false charges. We trust that all human rights defenders who have been falsely accused will get justice,” they said. Bhardwaj is among the 12 persons – all lawyers, activists and academics – who have been arrested in the Bhima Koregaon case.

Background

On November 5, 2016, the Sukma (Bastar) police had registered a case against the six individuals in connection with the murder of Shamnat Baghel, a resident of Nama village in Sukma district. The case was registered on the basis of a statement allegedly made by the deceased person’s wife and they were charged for murder, criminal conspiracy and rioting. However, in February last year, the state police dropped their names in the murder case, registered at the Tongpal police station of Sukma district. In a chargesheet filed before a local court, the police said during the investigation they did not find any evidence against them.

A Hindustan Times report quoted the superintendent of police, Sukma, as saying that the statements of the villagers that were taken “suggests that they were not present at the time of the murder”. Therefore, the police took back the cases against the individuals.

Professor Sundar teaches at the Delhi University, Professor Archana at the Jawaharlal Nehru University and Vineet Tiwari is associated with the Joshi Adhikari Institute of Social Studies. Sanjay Parate is an office bearer of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)’s Chhattisgarh unit, Manju Kawasi and Mangla Ram Verma are local residents. In May 2016, the six of them had visited Bijapur, Sukma, Bastar and Kanker of the state as part of a fact-finding mission. According to the fact-finding report, “The focus of the visit was on the situation of ordinary villagers who are living through the conflict between the state and Maoists.”

A map of Chhattisgarh’s insurgency-hit Sukma district.

The registration of an FIR against these individuals had created a “nationwide outcry and protest”, forcing NHRC to take suo motu cognizance of the matter. Relying on the statement of PUCL, the commission had issued summons to the then chief secretary of Chhattisgarh and inspector general of police, Bastar range, S.R.P. Kalluri, “to explain the allegations of hostility and abuse of power against human rights defenders”.

Referring to the FIR, the PUCL in its statement had noted, “Even if we are to believe that an unlettered village woman can clearly remember and repeat the six unfamiliar names above, which she heard during this incident under very dire circumstances, and even accepting this unlikely story in its entirety, it is evident that no crime can be made out in the FIR against the members of the fact finding team and they certainly cannot be held accountable and implicated for murder on the basis of this statement.”

Compensation to fact finding team

Moreover, in the same order, the commission also directed the state government to pay monetary compensation (Rs 1 lakh each) to the members of a fact finding team of lawyers from Telangana.

In December 2016, seven human rights lawyers who were part of a fact-finding team enquiring into the rising cases of encounter killings in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region were arrested and booked under the Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act (CSPSA). According to sources, the Chhattisgarh police has claimed that the team was carrying Rs 1 Lakh, which was supposed to be given to the Maoist party. However, the activists had denied the allegation vehemently.

Also Read: Activists Probing Encounter Killings in Bastar Sent to Prison Under Public Safety Act

“In the opinion of the Commission, since false FIRs was registered against all the aforesaid seven persons and later they were acquitted of all the charges by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Sukma, they have definitely undergone mental trauma and agony and for this violation of their human rights, we recommend and direct the Government of Chhattisgarh through its Chief Secretary to pay a sum of Rs. One Lakh as monetary compensation to each of the seven lawyers of the Fact Finding Team of Telangana,” noted the order.

Meanwhile, the PUCL has welcomed the NHRC directions to the Chhattisgarh government, ordering compensation. However, the civil liberties group also added that “we are disappointed that the NHRC was not inclined to consider two other cases of fake FIRs under its purview: that of the Bastar journalist Santosh Yadav, and of Dr. Lakhan Singh, the former president of PUCL Chhattisgarh, now deceased.”

“We are dismayed to note that the government of Chhattisgarh has not taken, nor has it been directed by the NHRC to take, any punitive criminal action against Mr. SRP Kalluri or any other police officer involved in these criminal actions of malicious prosecution, which are evidently meant to punish those speaking out against atrocities committed by the Chhattisgarh police and other armed forces,” the PUCL noted in a statement released on Friday.

According to the PUCL, “Till such actions are not recommended by the NHRC, the impunity of the police force in the name of combating insurgency in the state of Chhattisgarh and other states will continue unabated.”

Disclosure: One of the individuals awarded compensation by the NHRC, Nandini Sundar, is married to a founding editor of The Wire.

Note: This article was updated on August 7, 2020, with PUCL’s response.