*** This is very long. But anyone interested in
Indian justice, Kashmir and  Assam  ought to take
the time to read it.

cm







Afzal Hanging

   'And His Life Should Become Extinct'

   The Very Strange Story of the Attack on the Indian Parliament

   ARUNDHATI ROY
We know this much: On  December 13, 2001, the
Indian Parliament was in its winter session. (The
NDA government was under attack for yet another
corruption scandal.) At 11.30 in the morning,
five armed men in a white Ambassador car fitted
out with an Improvised Explosive Device drove
through the gates of Parliament House. When they
were challenged, they jumped out of the car and
opened fire. In the gun battle that followed, all
the attackers were killed. Eight security
personnel and a gardener were killed too. The
dead terrorists, the police said, had enough
explosives to blow up the Parliament building,
and enough ammunition to take on a whole
battalion of soldiers. Unlike most terrorists,
these five left behind a thick trail of
evidence-weapons, mobile phones, phone numbers,
ID cards, photographs, packets of dry fruit, and
even a love letter.

Not surprisingly, PM A.B. Vajpayee seized the
opportunity to compare the assault to the
September 11 attacks in the US that had happened
only three months previously.

On December 14, 2001, the day after the attack on
Parliament, the Special Cell of the Delhi Police
claimed it had tracked down several people
suspected to have been involved in the
conspiracy. A day later, on December 15, it
announced that it had "cracked the case": the
attack, the police said, was a joint operation
carried out by two  Pakistan-based terrorist
groups, Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.
Twelve people were named as being part of the
conspiracy. Ghazi Baba of the Jaish (Usual
Suspect I), Maulana Masood Azhar also of the
Jaish (Usual Suspect II); Tariq Ahmed (a
"Pakistani"); five deceased "Pakistani
terrorists" (we still don't know who they are).
And three Kashmiri men, S.A.R. Geelani, Shaukat
Hussain Guru, and Mohammed Afzal; and Shaukat's
wife Afsan Guru. These were the only four to be
arrested.

In the tense days that followed, Parliament was
adjourned. On  December 21, India recalled its
high commissioner from Pakistan, suspended air,
rail and bus communications and banned
over-flights. It put into motion a massive
mobilisation of its war machinery, and moved more
than half-a-million troops to the Pakistan
border. Foreign embassies evacuated their staff
and citizens, and tourists travelling to India
were issued cautionary travel advisories. The
world watched with bated breath as the
subcontinent was taken to the brink of  nuclear
war. (All this  cost India  an estimated Rs
10,000 crore of public money. A few hundred
soldiers died just in the panicky process of
mobilisation.)

Almost three-and-a-half years later, on August 4,
2005, the Supreme Court delivered its  final
judgement in the case. It endorsed the view that
the Parliament attack be looked upon as an act of
war.It said, "The attempted attack on Parliament
is an undoubted invasion of the sovereign
attribute of the State including the Government
of India which is its alter ego...the deceased
terrorists were roused and impelled to action by
a strong anti-Indian feeling as the writing on
the fake home ministry sticker found on the car
(Ex PW1/8) reveals." It went on to say "the modus
operandi adopted by the hardcore 'fidayeens' are
all demonstrative of launching a war against the
Government of India".

The text on the fake home ministry sticker read as follows:

"INDIA IS A VERY BAD COUNTRY AND WE HATE INDIA WE
WANT TO DESTROY INDIA AND WITH  THE GRACE OF GOD
WE WILL DO IT GOD IS WITH US AND WE WILL TRY OUR
BEST. THIS EDIET WAJPAI AND ADVANI WE WILL KILL
THEM. THEY HAVE KILLED MANY INNOCENT PEOPLE AND
THEY ARE VERY BAD  PERSONS THERE BROTHER BUSH IS
ALSO A VERY BAD PERSON HE WILL BE NEXT TARGET HE
IS ALSO THE KILLER OF INNOCENT PEOPLE HE HAVE TO
DIE AND WE WILL DO IT."


This subtly worded sticker-manifesto was
displayed on the windscreen of the car bomb as it
drove into Parliament. (Given the amount of text,
it's a wonder the driver could see anything at
all. Maybe that's why he collided with the
Vice-President's cavalcade?)

The police chargesheet was filed in a special
fast-track trial court designated for cases under
the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA). The trial
court sentenced Geelani, Shaukat and Afzal to
death. Afsan Guru was sentenced to five years of
rigorous imprisonment. The high court
subsequently acquitted Geelani and Afsan, but it
upheld Shaukat's and Afzal's death sentence.
Eventually, the Supreme Court upheld the
acquittals, and reduced Shaukat's punishment to
10 years of rigorous imprisonment. However it not
just confirmed, but enhanced Mohammed Afzal's
sentence. He has been given three life sentences
and a double death sentence.

In its August 4, 2005, judgement, the Supreme
Court clearly says that there was no evidence
that Mohammed Afzal belonged to any terrorist
group or organisation. But it also says, "As is
the case with most of the conspiracies, there is
and could be no direct evidence of the agreement
amounting to criminal conspiracy. However, the
circumstances, cumulatively weighed, would
unerringly point to the collaboration of the
accused Afzal with the slain 'fidayeen'
terrorists."

So: No direct evidence, but yes, circumstantial evidence.

A controversial paragraph in the judgement goes
on to say, "The incident, which resulted in heavy
casualties, had shaken the entire nation, and the
collective conscience of the society will only be
satisfied if capital punishment is awarded to the
offender. The challenge to the unity, integrity
and sovereignty of India by these acts of
terrorists and conspirators can only be
compensated by giving maximum punishment to the
person who is proved to be the conspirator in
this treacherous act" (emphasis mine).

To invoke the 'collective conscience of society'
to validate ritual murder, which is what the
death penalty is, skates precariously close to
valorising lynch law.It's chilling to think that
this has been laid upon us not by predatory
politicians or sensation-seeking journalists
(though they too have done that), but as an edict
from the highest court in the land.

Spelling out the reasons for awarding Afzal the
death penalty, the judgement goes on to say, "The
appellant, who is a surrendered militant and who
was bent upon repeating the acts of treason
against the nation, is a menace to the society
and his life should become extinct."

This paragraph combines flawed logic with
absolute ignorance of what it means to be a
'surrendered militant' in Kashmir today.

So: Should Mohammed Afzal's life become extinct?

A small, but influential minority of
intellectuals, activists, editors, lawyers and
public figures have objected to the Death
Sentence as a matter of moral principle. They
also argue that there is no empirical evidence to
suggest that the Death Sentence works as a
deterrent to terrorists. (How can it, when, in
this age of fidayeen and suicide bombers, death
seems to be the main attraction?)

If opinion polls, letters-to-the-editor and the
reactions of live audiences in TV studios are a
correct gauge of public opinion in India, then
the lynch mob is expanding by the hour. It looks
as though an overwhelming majority of Indian
citizens would like to see Mohammed Afzal hanged
every day, weekends included, for the next few
years. L.K. Advani, leader of the Opposition,
displaying an unseemly sense of urgency, wants
him to be hanged as soon as possible, without a
moment's delay.

Meanwhile in Kashmir, public opinion is equally
overwhelming. Huge angry protests make it
increasingly obvious that if Afzal is hanged, the
consequences will be political. Some protest what
they see as a miscarriage of justice, but even as
they protest, they do not expect justice from
Indian courts. They have lived through too much
brutality to believe in courts, affidavits and
justice any more. Others would like to see
Mohammed Afzal march to the gallows like Maqbool
Butt, a proud martyr to the cause of Kashmir's
freedom struggle. On the whole, most Kashmiris
see Mohammed Afzal as a sort of prisoner-of-war
being tried in the courts of an occupying power.
(Which it undoubtedly is). Naturally, political
parties, in India as well as in Kashmir, have
sniffed the breeze and are cynically closing in
for the kill.

Sadly, in the midst of the frenzy, Afzal seems to
have forfeited the right to be an individual, a
real person any more. He's become a vehicle for
everybody's fantasies-nationalists, separatists,
and anti-capital punishment activists. He has
become India's great villain and Kashmir's great
hero-proving only that whatever our pundits,
policymakers and peace gurus say, all these years
later, the war in Kashmir has by no means ended.

In a situation as fraught and politicised as
this, it's tempting to believe that the time to
intervene has come and gone. After all, the
judicial process lasted 40 months, and the
Supreme Court has examined the evidence before
it. It has convicted two of the accused and
acquitted the other two. Surely this in itself is
proof of judicial objectivity? What more remains
to be said? There's another way of looking at it.
Isn't it odd that the prosecution's case, proved
to be so egregiously wrong in one half, has been
so gloriously vindicated in the other?

The story of Mohammed Afzal is fascinating
precisely because he is not Maqbool Butt. Yet his
story too is inextricably entwined with the story
of the Kashmir Valley. It's a story whose
coordinates range far beyond the confines of
courtrooms and the limited imagination of people
who live in the secure heart of a self-declared
'superpower'.Mohammed Afzal's story has its
origins in a war zone whose laws are beyond the
pale of the fine arguments and delicate
sensibilities of normal jurisprudence.

For all these reasons it is critical that we
consider carefully the strange, sad, and utterly
sinister story of the December 13 Parliament
attack. It tells us a great deal about the way
the world's largest 'democracy' really works. It
connects the biggest things to the smallest. It
traces the pathways that connect what happens in
the shadowy grottos of our police stations to
what goes on in the cold, snowy streets of
Paradise Valley; from there to the impersonal
malign furies that bring nations to the brink of
nuclear war. It raises specific questions that
deserve specific, and not ideological or
rhetorical answers. What hangs in the balance is
far more than the fate of one man.

On October 4 this year, I was one amongst a very
small group of people who had gathered at Jantar
Mantar in New Delhi to protest against Mohammed
Afzal's death sentence. I was there because I
believe Mohammed Afzal is only a pawn in a very
sinister game. He's not the Dragon he's being
made out to be, he's only the Dragon's footprint.
And if the footprint is made to 'become extinct',
we'll never know who the Dragon was. Is.

Not surprisingly, that afternoon there were more
journalists and TV crews than there were
protesters. Most of the attention was on Ghalib,
Afzal's angelic looking little son. Kind-hearted
people, not sure of what to do with a young boy
whose father was going to the gallows, were
plying him with ice-creams and cold drinks. As I
looked around at the people gathered there, I
noted a sad little fact. The convener of the
protest, the small, stocky man who was nervously
introducing the speakers and making the
announcements, was S.A.R. Geelani, a young
lecturer in Arabic Literature at Delhi
University. Accused Number Three in the
Parliament Attack case. He was arrested on
December 14, 2001, a day after the attack, by the
Special Cell of the Delhi Police. Though Geelani
was brutally tortured in custody, though his
family-his wife, young children and brother-were
illegally detained, he refused to confess to a
crime he hadn't committed. Of course you wouldn't
know this if you read newspapers in the days
following his arrest. They carried detailed
descriptions of an entirely imaginary,
non-existent confession. The Delhi Police
portrayed Geelani as the evil mastermind of the
Indian end of the conspiracy. Its scriptwriters
orchestrated a hateful propaganda campaign
against him, which was eagerly amplified and
embellished by a hyper-nationalistic,
thrill-seeking media. The police knew perfectly
well that in criminal trials, judges are not
supposed to take cognisance of media reports. So
they knew that their entirely cold-blooded
fabrication of a profile for these 'terrorists'
would mould public opinion, and create a climate
for the trial. But it would not come in for any
legal scrutiny.

Here are some of the malicious, outright lies
that appeared in the mainstream press:

'Case Cracked: Jaish behind Attack'
The Hindustan Times, Dec 16, 2001: Neeta Sharma and Arun Joshi

"In Delhi, the Special Cell detectives detained a
Lecturer in Arabic, who teaches at Zakir Hussain
College (Evening)...after it was established that
he had received a call made by militants on his
mobile phone." Another column in the same paper
said: "Terrorists spoke to him before the attack
and the lecturer made a phone call to Pakistan
after the strike."

'DU Lecturer was terror plan hub'
The Times of India, Dec 17, 2001

"The attack on Parliament on December 13 was a
joint operation of the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) terrorist groups in which a
Delhi University lecturer, Syed A.R.Gilani, was
one of the key facilitators in Delhi, Police
Commissioner Ajai Raj Sharma said on Sunday."

'Varsity don guided fidayeen'
The Hindu, Dec 17, 2001: Devesh K. Pandey

"During interrogation Geelani disclosed that he
was in the know of the conspiracy since the day
the 'fidayeen' attack was planned."

'Don lectured on terror in free time'
The Hindustan Times, Dec 17, 2001: Sutirtho Patranobis

"Investigations have revealed that by evening he
was at the college teaching Arabic literature. In
his free time, behind closed doors, either at his
house or at Shaukat Hussain's, another suspect to
be arrested, he took and gave lessons on
terrorism..."

'Professor's proceeds'
The Hindustan Times, Dec 17, 2001

"Geelani recently purchased a house for 22 lakhs
in West Delhi. Delhi Police are investigating how
he came upon such a windfall...".

'Aligarh se England tak chaatron mein aatankwaad
ke beej bo raha tha Geelani (From Aligarh to
England Geelani sowed the seeds of terrorism)
   Rashtriya Sahara, Dec 18, 2001: Sujit Thakur

Trans: "...According to sources and information
collected by investigation agencies, Geelani has
made a statement to the police that he was an
agent of Jaish-e-Mohammed for a long time.... It
was because of Geelani's articulation, style of
working and sound planning that in 2000
Jaish-e-Mohammed gave him the responsibility of
spreading intellectual terrorism."

'Terror suspect frequent visitor to Pak mission'
The Hindustan Times, Dec 21, 2001: Swati Chaturvedi

   "During interrogation, Geelani has admitted that
he had made frequent calls to Pakistan and was in
touch with militants belonging to
Jaish-e-Mohammed...Geelani said that he had been
provided with funds by some members of the Jaish
and told to buy two flats that could be used in
militant operations."

'Person of the Week'
Sunday Times of India, Dec 23, 2001:

"A cellphone proved his undoing. Delhi
University's Syed A.R. Geelani was the first to
be arrested in the December 13 case-a shocking
reminder that the roots of terrorism go far and
deep..."

   Zee TV trumped them all. It produced a film
called December 13th, a 'docudrama' that claimed
to be the 'truth based on the police
chargesheet'. (A contradiction in terms, wouldn't
you say?) The film was privately screened for
Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee and Home Minister
L.K. Advani. Both men applauded the film. Their
approbation was widely reported by the media.


   TV grab of one of the terrorists of the December 13, 2001, Parliament attack

The Supreme Court dismissed an appeal to stay the
broadcast of the film on the grounds that judges
are not influenced by the media. (Would the
Supreme Court concede that even if judges are
beyond being influenced by media reports, the
'collective conscience of the society' might not
be?) December 13th was broadcast on Zee TV's
national network a few days before the fast-track
trial court sentenced Geelani, Afzal and Shaukat
to death. Geelani eventually spent 18 months in
jail, many of them in solitary confinement on
death row.

He was released when the high court acquitted him
and Afsan Guru. (Afsan, who was pregnant when she
was arrested, had her baby in prison. Her
experience broke her. She now suffers from a
serious psychotic condition.) The Supreme Court
upheld the acquittal. It found absolutely no
evidence to link Geelani with the Parliament
attack or with any terrorist organisation. Not a
single newspaper or journalist or TV channel has
seen fit to apologise to Geelani for their lies.
But S.A.R.Geelani's troubles didn't end there.
His acquittal left the Special Cell with a plot,
but no 'mastermind'. This, as we shall see,
becomes something of a problem. More importantly,
Geelani was a free man now-free to meet the
press, talk to lawyers, clear his name. On the
evening of February 8, 2005, during the course of
the final hearings at the Supreme Court, Geelani
was making his way to his lawyer's house. A
mysterious gunman appeared from the shadows and
fired five bullets into his body. Miraculously,
he survived. It was an unbelievable new twist to
the story. Clearly somebody was worried about
what he knew, what he would say.... One would
imagine that the police would give this
investigation top priority, hoping it would throw
up some vital new leads into the Parliament
attack case. Instead, the Special Cell treated
Geelani as though he was the prime suspect in his
own assassination. They confiscated his computer
and took away his car. Hundreds of activists
gathered outside the hospital and called for an
enquiry into the assassination attempt, which
would include an investigation into the Special
Cell itself. (Of course that never happened. More
than a year has passed, nobody shows any interest
in pursuing the matter. Odd.)

So here he was now, S.A.R. Geelani, having
survived this terrible ordeal, standing up in
public at Jantar Mantar, saying that Mohammed
Afzal didn't deserve a death sentence. How much
easier it would be for him to keep his head down,
stay at home. I was profoundly moved, humbled, by
this quiet display of courage.

   Across the line from S.A.R. Geelani, in the
jostling crowd of journalists and photographers,
trying his best to look inconspicuous in a lemon
T-shirt and gaberdine pants, holding a little
tape-recorder, was another Gilani. Iftikhar
Gilani. He had been in prison too. He was
arrested and taken into police custody on June 9,
2002. At the time he was a reporter for the
Jammu-based Kashmir Times. He was charged under
the Official Secrets Act. His 'crime' was that he
possessed obsolete information on Indian troop
deployment in 'Indian-held Kashmir'. (This
'information', it turns out, was a published
monograph by a Pakistani research institute, and
was freely available on the Internet for anybody
who wished to download it. )  Iftikhar Gilani's
computer was seized. IB officials tampered with
his hard drive, meddled with the downloaded file,
changed the words 'Indian-held Kashmir' to 'Jammu
and Kashmir' to make it sound like an Indian
document, and added the words 'Only for
Reference. Strictly Not For Circulation', to make
it seem like a secret document smuggled out of
the home ministry. The directorate general of
military intelligence-though it had been given a
photocopy of the monograph-ignored repeated
appeals from Iftikhar Gilani's counsel, kept
quiet, and refused to clarify the matter for a
whole six months.


   Ghalib, 7, Afzal's son, with Yasin Malik and
S.A.R. Geelani in Delhi on Oct '06

Once again the malicious lies put out by the
Special Cell were obediently reproduced in the
newspapers. Here are a few of the lies they told:

"Iftikhar Gilani, 35-year-old son-in-law of
Hurriyat hardliner Syed Ali Shah Geelani, is
believed to have admitted in a city court that he
was an agent of Pakistan's spy agency." -- The
Hindustan Times, June, 11, 2002: Neeta Sharma

"Iftikhar Gilani was the pin-point man of Syed
Salahuddin of Hizbul Mujahideen. Investigations
have revealed that Iftikhar used to pass
information to Salahuddin about the moves of
Indian security agencies.He had camouflaged his
real motives behind his journalist's facade so
well that it took years to unmask him,
well-placed sources said." -- The Pioneer, Pramod
Kumar Singh

"Geelani ke damaad ke ghar aaykar chhaapon mein
behisaab sampati wa samwaidansheil dastaweiz
baramad" (Enormous wealth and sensitive documents
recovered from the house of Geelani's son-in-law
during income tax raids) -- Hindustan, June 10,
2002

Never mind that the police chargesheet recorded a
recovery of only Rs 3,450 from his house.

Meanwhile, other media reports said that he had a
three-bedroom flat, an undisclosed income of Rs
22 lakh, had evaded income tax of Rs 79 lakh,
that he and his wife were absconding to evade
arrest.

But arrested he was. In jail, Iftikhar Gilani was
beaten, abjectly humiliated. In his book My Days
In Prison he tells of how, among other things, he
was made to clean the toilet with his shirt and
then wear the same shirt for days. After six
months of court arguments and lobbying by his
colleagues, when it became obvious that if the
case against him continued it would lead to
serious embarrassment, he was released.

Here he was now. A free man, a reporter come to
Jantar Mantar to cover a story. It occurred to me
that S.A.R. Geelani, Iftikhar Gilani and Mohammed
Afzal would have been in Tihar jail at the same
time. (Along with scores of other less well known
Kashmiris whose stories we may never learn.)

It can and will be argued that the cases of both
S.A.R. Geelani and Iftikhar Gilani serve only to
demonstrate the objectivity of the Indian
judicial system and its capacity for
self-correction, they do not discredit it. That's
only partly true. Both Iftikhar Gilani and S.A.R.
Geelani are fortunate to be Delhi-based Kashmiris
with a community of articulate, middle-class
peers; journalists and university teachers, who
knew them well and rallied around them in their
time of need. S.A.R. Geelani's lawyer Nandita
Haksar put together an All India Defence
Committee for S.A.R. Geelani (of which I was a
member). There was a coordinated campaign by
activists, lawyers and journalists to rally
behind Geelani. Well-known lawyers Ram
Jethmalani, K.G. Kannabiran, Vrinda Grover
represented him. They showed up the case for what
it was-a pack of absurd assumptions,
suppositions, and outright lies, bolstered by
fabricated evidence. So of course judicial
objectivity exists. But it's a shy beast that
lives somewhere deep in the labyrinth of our
legal system. It shows itself rarely. It takes
whole teams of top lawyers to coax it out of its
lair and make it come out and play. It's what in
newspaper-speak would be called a Herculean task.
Mohammed Afzal did not have Hercules on his side.

For five months, from the time he was arrested to
the day the police charge-sheet was filed,
Mohammed Afzal, lodged in a high-security prison,
had no legal defence, no legal advice. No top
lawyers, no defence committee (in India or
Kashmir), and no campaign. Of all the four
accused, he was the most vulnerable. His case was
far more complicated than Geelani's.
Significantly, during much of this time, Afzal's
younger brother Hilal was illegally detained by
the Special Operations Group (SOG) in Kashmir. He
was released after the chargesheet was filed.
(This is a piece of the puzzle that will only
fall into place as the story unfolds.)

In a serious lapse of procedure, on December 20,
2001, the investigating officer, Asst
Commissioner of Police (ACP) Rajbir Singh
(affectionately known as Delhi's 'encounter
specialist' for the number of 'terrorists' he has
killed in 'encounters'), called a press
conference at the Special Cell. Mohammed Afzal
was made to 'confess' before the media. Deputy
commissioner of police (DCP) Ashok Chand told the
press that Afzal had already confessed to the
police.This turned out to be untrue. Afzal's
formal confession to the police took place only
the next day (after which he continued to remain
in police custody and vulnerable to torture,
another serious procedural lapse). In his media
'confession' Afzal incriminated himself in the
Parliament attack completely.


   From left; Shaukat Guru, S.A.R. Geelani and Mohammed Afzal in Delhi, 2001

   During the course of this 'media confession' a
curious thing happened. In an answer to a direct
question, Afzal clearly said that Geelani had
nothing to do with the attack and was completely
innocent. At this point, ACP Rajbir Singh shouted
at him and forced him to shut up, and requested
the media not to carry this part of Afzal's
'confession'. And they obeyed! The story came out
only three months later when the television
channel Aaj Tak re-broadcast the 'confession' in
a programme called Hamle Ke Sau Din (Hundred Days
of the Attack) and somehow kept this part in.
Meanwhile in the eyes of the general public-who
know little about the law and criminal
procedure-Afzal's public 'confession' only
confirmed his guilt. The verdict of the
'collective conscience of society' would not have
been hard to second guess.

   The day after this 'media' confession, Afzal's
'official' confession was extracted from him. The
flawlessly structured, perfectly fluent narrative
dictated in articulate English to DCP Ashok Chand
(in the DCP's words, "he kept on narrating and I
kept on writing") was delivered in a sealed
envelope to a judicial magistrate. In this
confession, Afzal, now the sheet-anchor of the
prosecution's case, weaves a masterful tale that
connected Ghazi Baba, Maulana Masood Azhar, a man
called Tariq, and the five dead terrorists; their
equipment, arms and ammunition, home ministry
passes, a laptop, and fake ID cards; detailed
lists of exactly how many kilos of what chemical
he bought from where, the exact ratio in which
they were mixed to make explosives; and the exact
times at which he made and received calls on
which mobile number. (For some reason, by then
Afzal had also changed his mind about Geelani and
implicated him completely in the conspiracy.)

Each point of the 'confession' corresponded
perfectly with the evidence that the police had
already gathered. In other words, Afzal's
confessional statement slipped perfectly into the
version that the police had already offered the
press days ago, like Cinderella's foot into the
glass slipper. (If it were a film, you could say
it was a screenplay, which came with its own box
of props. Actually, as we know now, it was made
into a film. Zee TV owes Afzal some royalty
payments. )

Eventually, both the high court and the Supreme
Court set aside Afzal's confession citing 'lapses
and violations of procedural safeguards'. But
Afzal's confession somehow survives, the phantom
keystone in the prosecution's case. And before it
was technically and legally set aside, the
confessional document had already served a major
extra-legal purpose: On December 21, 2001, when
the Government of India launched its war effort
against Pakistan it said it had 'incontrovertible
evidence' of Pakistan's involvement. Afzal's
confession was the only 'proof' of Pakistan's
involvement that the government had! Afzal's
confession. And the sticker-manifesto.Think about
it. On the basis of this illegal confession
extracted under torture, hundreds of thousands of
soldiers were moved to the Pakistan border at
huge cost to the public exchequer, and the
subcontinent devolved into a game of nuclear
brinkmanship in which the whole world was held
hostage.

Big Whispered Question: Could it have been the
other way around? Did the confession precipitate
the war, or did the need for a war precipitate
the need for the confession?

Later, when Afzal's confession was set aside by
the higher courts, all talk of Jaish-e-Mohammed
and Lashkar-e-Taiba ceased. The only other link
to Pakistan was the identity of the five dead
fidayeen. Mohammed Afzal, still in police
custody, identified them as Mohammed, Rana, Raja,
Hamza and Haider. The home minister said they
"looked like Pakistanis", the police said they
were Pakistanis, the trial court judge said they
were Pakistanis. And there the matter rests. Had
we been told that their names were Happy, Bouncy,
Lucky, Jolly and Kidingamani from Scandinavia, we
would have had to accept that too. We still don't
know who they really are, or where they're from.
Is anyone curious? Doesn't look like it. The high
court said the "identity of the five deceased
thus stands established. Even otherwise it makes
no difference. What is relevant is the
association of the accused with the said five
persons and not their names."

In his Statement of the Accused (which, unlike
the confession, is made in court and not police
custody) Afzal says: "I had not identified any
terrorist. Police told me the names of terrorists
and forced me to identify them." But by then it
was too late for him. On the first day of the
trial, the lawyer appointed by the trial court
judge agreed to accept Afzal's identification of
the bodies and the postmortem reports as
undisputed evidence without formal proof! This
baffling move was to have serious consequences
for Afzal. To quote from the Supreme Court
judgement, "The first circumstance against the
accused Afzal is that Afzal knew who the deceased
terrorists were. He identified the dead bodies of
the deceased terrorists. On this aspect the
evidence remains unshattered."

Of course it's possible that the dead terrorists
were foreign militants. But it is just as
possible that they were not. Killing people and
falsely identifying them as 'foreign terrorists',
or falsely identifying dead people as 'foreign
terrorists', or falsely identifying living people
as terrorists, is not uncommon among the police
or security forces either in Kashmir or even on
the streets of Delhi.

Bodies of the Chhittisinghpura 'terrorists' being exhumed
   The best known among the many well-documented
cases in Kashmir, one that went on to become an
international scandal, is the killing that took
place after the Chhittisinghpura massacre. On the
night of April 20, 2000, just before the US
President Bill Clinton arrived in New Delhi, 35
Sikhs were killed in the village of
Chhittisinghpura by 'unidentified gunmen' wearing
Indian Army uniforms. (In Kashmir many people
suspected that Indian security forces were behind
the massacre.) Five days later the SOG and the
7th Rashtriya Rifles, a counter-insurgency unit
of the army, killed five people in a joint
operation outside a village called Pathribal. The
next morning they announced that the men were the
Pakistan-based foreign militants who had killed
the Sikhs in Chhittisinghpura. The bodies were
found burned and disfigured. Under their
(unburned) army uniforms, they were in ordinary
civilian clothes.It turned out that they were all
local people, rounded up from Anantnag district
and brutally killed in cold blood.

There are others:

On October 20, 2003, the Srinagar newspaper
Al-safa printed a picture of a 'Pakistani
militant' who the 18 Rashtriya Rifles claimed
they had killed while he was trying to storm an
army camp. A baker in Kupwara, Wali Khan, saw the
picture and recognised it as his son, Farooq
Ahmed Khan, who had been picked up by soldiers in
a Gypsy two months earlier. His body was finally
exhumed more than a year later.

On April 20, 2004, the 18 Rashtriya Rifles posted
in the Lolab valley claimed it had killed four
foreign militants in a fierce encounter. It later
turned out that all four were ordinary labourers
from Jammu, hired by the army and taken to
Kupwara. An anonymous letter tipped off the
labourers' families who travelled to Kupwara and
eventually had the bodies exhumed.

On November 9, 2004, the army showcased 47
surrendered 'militants' to the press at Nagrota,
Jammu, in the presence of the General Officer
Commanding XVI, Corps and the Director General of
Police, J&K. The J&K police later found that 27
of them were just unemployed men who had been
given fake names and fake aliases and promised
government jobs in return for playing their part
in the charade.

These are just a few quick examples to illustrate
the fact that in the absence of any other
evidence, the police's word is just not good
enough.

The hearings in the fast-track trial court began
in May 2002. Let's not forget the climate in
which the trial took place. The frenzy over the
9/11 attacks was still in the air. The US was
gloating over its victory in Afghanistan. Gujarat
was convulsed by communal frenzy. A few months
previously, coach S-6 of the Sabarmati Express
had been set on fire and 58 Hindu pilgrims had
been burned alive inside. As 'revenge' in an
orchestrated pogrom, more than 2,000 Muslims were
publicly butchered and more than 1,50,000 driven
from their homes.

For Afzal, everything that could go wrong went
wrong. He was incarcerated in a high-security
prison, with no access to the outside world, and
no money to hire a lawyer professionally. Three
weeks into the trial the lawyer appointed by the
court asked to be discharged from the case
because she had now been professionally hired to
be on the team of lawyers for S.A.R. Geelani's
defence. The court appointed her junior, a lawyer
with very little experience, to represent Afzal.
He did not once visit his client in jail to take
instructions. He did not summon a single witness
for Afzal's defence and barely cross-questioned
any of the prosecution witnesses. Five days after
he was appointed, on July 8, Afzal asked the
court for another lawyer and gave the court a
list of lawyers whom he hoped the court might
hire for him. Each of them refused. (Given the
frenzy of propaganda in the media, it was hardly
surprising. At a later stage of the trial, when
senior advocate Ram Jethmalani agreed to
represent Geelani, Shiv Sena mobs ransacked his
Bombay office.) The judge expressed his inability
to do anything about this, and gave Afzal the
right to cross-examine witnesses. It's
astonishing for the judge to expect a layperson
to be able cross-examine witnesses in a criminal
trial. It's a virtually impossible task for
someone who does not have a sophisticated
understanding of criminal law, including new laws
that had just been passed, like POTA, and the
amendments to the Evidence Act and the Telegraph
Act. Even experienced lawyers were having to work
overtime to bring themselves up to date.

The case against Afzal was built up in the trial
court on the strength of the testimonies of
almost 80 prosecution witnesses: landlords,
shopkeepers, technicians from cell-phone
companies, the police themselves.This was a
crucial period of the trial, when the legal
foundation of the case was being laid. It
required meticulous back-breaking legal work in
which evidence needed to be amassed and put on
record, witnesses for the defence summoned and
testimonies from prosecution witnesses
cross-questioned. Even if the verdict of the
trial court went against the accused (trial
courts are notoriously conservative), the
evidence could then be worked upon by lawyers in
the higher courts. Through this absolutely
critical period, Afzal went virtually undefended.
It was at this stage that the bottom fell out of
his case, and the noose tightened around his neck.

Even still, during the trial, the skeletons began
to clatter out of the Special Cell's cupboard in
an embarrassing heap. It became clear that the
accumulation of lies, fabrications, forged
documents and serious lapses in procedure began
from the very first day of the investigation.
While the high court and Supreme Court judgements
have pointed these things out, they have just
wagged an admonitory finger at the police, or
occasionally called it a 'disturbing feature',
which is a disturbing feature in itself. At no
point in the trial has the police been seriously
reprimanded, leave alone penalised. In fact,
almost every step of the way, the Special Cell
displayed an egregious disregard for procedural
norms. The shoddy callousness with which the
investigations were carried out demonstrate a
worrying belief that they wouldn't be 'found
out,' and if they were, it wouldn't matter very
much. Their confidence does not seem to have been
misplaced.

There is fudging in almost every part of the investigation.

Consider the Time and Place of the Arrests and
Seizures: The Delhi Police said that Afzal and
Shaukat were arrested in Srinagar based on
information given to them by Geelani following
his arrest. The court records show that the
message to look out for Shaukat and Afzal was
flashed to the Srinagar police on December 15 at
5.45 am. But according to the Delhi Police's
records Geelani was only arrested in Delhi on
December 15 at 10 am-four hours after they had
started looking for Afzal and Shaukat in
Srinagar. They haven't been able to explain this
discrepancy. The high court judgement puts it on
record that the police version contains a
'material contradiction' and cannot be true. It
goes down as a 'disturbing feature.' Why the
Delhi Police needed to lie remains unasked, and
unanswered.

When the police arrest somebody, procedure
requires them to have public witnesses for the
arrest who sign an Arrest Memo and a Seizure Memo
for what they may have 'seized' from those who
have been arrested-goods, cash, documents,
whatever. The police claim they arrested Afzal
and Shaukat together on December 15 at 11 am in
Srinagar. They say they 'seized' the truck the
two men were fleeing in (it was registered in the
name of Shaukat's wife). They also say they
seized a Nokia mobile phone, a laptop and Rs 10
lakh from Afzal. In his Statement of the Accused,
Afzal says he was arrested at a bus stop in
Srinagar and that no laptop, mobile phone or
money was 'seized' from him.

Scandalously, the Arrest Memos for both Afzal and
Shaukat have been signed in Delhi, by Bismillah,
Geelani's younger brother, who was at the time
being held in illegal confinement at the Lodhi
Road Police Station. Meanwhile, the two witnesses
who signed the seizure memo for the phone, the
laptop and the Rs 10 lakh are both from the J&K
Police. One of them is Head Constable Mohammed
Akbar (Prosecution Witness 62) who, as we shall
see later, is no stranger to Mohammad Afzal, and
is not just any old policeman who happened to be
passing by. Even by the J&K Police's own
admission they first located Afzal and Shaukat in
Parimpura Fruit Mandi.For reasons they don't
state, the police didn't arrest them there. They
say they followed them to a less public
place-where there were no public witnesses.

So here's another serious inconsistency in the
prosecution's case. Of this the high court
judgement says 'the time of arrest of accused
persons has been seriously dented'. Shockingly,
it is at this contested time and place of arrest
that the police claim to have recovered the most
vital evidence that implicates Afzal in the
conspiracy: the mobile phone and the laptop. Once
again, in the matter of the date and time of the
arrests, and in the alleged seizure of the
incriminating laptop and the Rs 10 lakh, we have
only the word of the police, against the word of
a 'terrorist'.

The Seizures Continued: The seized laptop, the
police said, contained the files that created the
fake home ministry pass and the fake identity
cards. It contained no other useful information.
They claimed that Afzal was carrying it to
Srinagar in order to return it to Ghazi Baba. The
Investigating Officer, ACP Rajbir Singh, said
that the hard disk of the computer had been
sealed on January 16, 2002 (a whole month after
the seizure). But the computer shows that it was
accessed even after that date. The courts have
considered this but taken no cognisance of it.
(On a speculative note, isn't it strange that the
only incriminating information found on the
computer were the files used to make the fake
passes and ID cards? And a Zee TV film clip
showing the Parliament Building. If other
incriminating information had been deleted, why
wasn't this? And why did Ghazi Baba, Chief of
Operations of an international terrorist
organisation, need a laptop-with bad artwork on
it- so urgently?)

Consider the Mobile phone call records: Stared at
for long enough, a lot of the 'hard evidence'
produced by the Special Cell begins to look
dubious. The backbone of the prosecution's case
has to do with the recovery of mobile phones, SIM
cards, computerised call records, and the
testimonies of officials from cellphone companies
and shopkeepers who sold the phones and SIM cards
to Afzal and his accomplices. The call records
that were produced to show that Shaukat, Afzal ,
Geelani and Mohammad (one of the dead militants)
had all been in touch with each other very close
to the time of the attack were uncertified
computer printouts, not even copies of primary
documents. They were outputs of the billing
system stored as text files that could have been
easily doctored and at any time. For example, the
call records that were produced show that two
calls had been made at exactly the same time from
the same SIM card, but from separate handsets
with separate IMEI numbers. This means that
either the SIM card had been cloned or the call
records were doctored.

Consider the SIM card: To prop up its version of
the story, the prosecution relies heavily on one
particular mobile phone number-9811489429. The
police say it was Afzal's number-the number that
connected Afzal to Mohammad, Afzal to Shaukat,
and Shaukat to Geelani. The police also say that
this number was written on the back of the
identity tags found on the dead terrorists.
Pretty convenient. Lost Kitten! Call Mom at
9811489429. (It's worth mentioning that normal
procedure requires evidence gathered at the scene
of a crime to be sealed.The ID cards were never
sealed and remained in the custody of the police
and could have been tampered with at any time.)

A suspected 'militant' gunned down by the police in Ansal Plaza, Delhi, 2002
   The only evidence the police have that
9811489429 was indeed Afzal's number is Afzal's
confession, which as we have seen is no evidence
at all. The SIM card has never been found. The
police produced a prosecution witness, Kamal
Kishore, who identified Afzal and said that he
had sold him a Motorola phone and a SIM card on
December 4, 2001. However, the call records the
prosecution relied on show that that particular
SIM card was already in use on the November 6, a
whole month before Afzal is supposed to have
bought it! So either the witness is lying, or the
call records are false. The high court glosses
over this discrepancy by saying that Kamal
Kishore had only said that he sold Afzal a SIM
card, not this particular SIM card. The Supreme
Court judgement loftily says "The SIM card should
necessarily have been sold to Afzal prior to
4.12.2001." And that, my friends, is that.

Consider the Identification of the Accused: A
series of prosecution witnesses, most of them
shopkeepers, identified Afzal as the man to whom
they had sold various things: ammonium nitrate,
aluminum powder, sulphur, a Sujata mixer-grinder,
packets of dry fruit and so on. Normal procedure
would require these shopkeepers to pick Afzal out
from a number of people in a test identification
parade. This didn't happen. Instead Afzal was
identified by them when he 'led' the police to
these shops while he was in police custody and
introduced to the witnesses as an Accused in the
Parliament Attack. (Are we allowed to speculate
about whether he led the police or the police led
him to the shops? After all he was still in their
custody, still vulnerable to torture. If his
confession under these circumstances is legally
suspect, then why not all of this?)

The judges have pondered the violation of these
procedural norms but have not taken them very
seriously. They said that they did not see why
ordinary members of the public would have reason
to falsely implicate an innocent person. But does
this hold true, given the orgy of media
propaganda that ordinary members of the public
were subjected to, particularly in this case?
Does this hold true, if you take into account the
fact that ordinary shopkeepers, particularly
those who sell electronic goods without receipts
in the 'grey market', are completely beholden to
the Delhi Police?

None of the inconsistencies that I have written
about so far are the result of spectacular
detective work on my part. A lot of them are
documented in an excellent book called December
13th: Terror Over Democracy by Nirmalangshu
Mukherji; in two reports (Trial of Errors and
Balancing Act) published by the Peoples' Union
for Democratic Rights, Delhi; and most important
of all, in the three thick volumes of judgements
of the trial court, the high court and the
Supreme Court. All these are public documents,
lying on my desk. Why is it that when there is
this whole murky universe begging to be revealed,
our TV channels are busy staging hollow debates
between uninformed people and grasping
politicians? Why is it that apart from a few
sporadic independent commentators, our newspapers
carry front-page stories about who the hangman is
going to be, and macabre details about the length
(60 metres) and weight (3.75 kg) of the rope that
will be used to hang Mohammed Afzal (Indian
Express, October 16, 2006).Shall we pause for a
moment to say a few hosannas for the Free Press?

It's not an easy thing for most people to do, but
if you can, unmoor yourself conceptually, if only
for a moment, from the "Police is Good/Terrorists
are Evil" ideology. The evidence on offer minus
its ideological trappings opens up a chasm of
terrifying possibilities. It points in directions
which most of us would prefer not to look.

The prize for the Most Ignored Legal Document in
the entire case goes to the Statement of the
Accused Mohammed Afzal under Section 313 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. In this document, the
evidence against him is put to him by the court
in the form of questions. He can either accept
the evidence or dispute it, and has the
opportunity to put down his version of his story
in his own words. In Afzal's case, given that he
has never had any real opportunity to be heard,
this document tells his story in his voice.

In this document, Afzal accepts certain charges
made against him by the prosecution. He accepts
that he met a man called Tariq. He accepts that
Tariq introduced him to a man called Mohammad. He
accepts that he helped Mohammad come to Delhi and
helped him to buy a second-hand white Ambassador
car. He accepts that Mohammad was one of the five
fidayeen who was killed in the Attack. The
important thing about Afzal's Statement of the
Accused is that he makes no effort to completely
absolve himself or claim innocence. But he puts
his actions in a context that is devastating.
Afzal's statement explains the peripheral part he
played in the Parliament attack. But it also
ushers us towards an understanding of some
possible reasons for why the investigation was so
shoddy, why it pulls up short at the most crucial
junctures and why it is vital that we do not
dismiss this as just incompetence and shoddiness.
Even if we don't believe Afzal, given what we do
know about the trial and the role of the Special
Cell, it is inexcusable not to look in the
direction he's pointing. He gives specific
information-names, places, dates. (This could not
have been easy, given that his family, his
brothers, his wife and young son live in Kashmir
and are easy meat for the people he mentions in
his deposition.)

   In Afzal's words:

"I live in Sopre J&K and in the year 2000 when I
was there Army used to harass me almost daily,
then said once a week. One Raja Mohan Rai used to
tell me that I should give information to him
about militants. I was a surrendered militant and
all militants have to mark Attendance at Army
Camp every Sunday. I was not being physically
torture by me. He used to only just threatened
me. I used to give him small information which I
used to gather from newspaper, in order to save
myself. In June/ July 2000 I migrated from my
village and went to town Baramullah. I was having
a shop of distribution of Surgical instruments
which I was running on commission basis. One day
when I was going on my scooter S.T.F (State Task
Force) people came and picked me up and they
continuously tortured me for five days. Somebody
had given information to S.T.F that I was again
indulging in militant activities. That person was
confronted with me and released in my presence.
Then I was kept by them in custody for about 25
days and I got myself released by paying Rs 1
lakh. Special Cell People had confirmed this
incident. Thereafter I was given a certificate by
the S.T.F and they made me a Special Police
Officer for six months. They were knowing I will
not work for them. Tariq met me in Palhalan S.T.F
camp where I was in custody of S.T.F. Tariq met
me later on in Sri Nagar and told me he was
basically working for S.T.F.I told him I was also
working for S.T.F. Mohammad who was killed in
Attack on Parliament was along with Tariq. Tariq
told me he was from Keran sector of Kashmir and
he told me that I should take Mohammad to Delhi
as Mohammad has to go out of country from Delhi
after some time. I don't know why I was caught by
the police of Sri Nagar on 15.12.2001. I was
boarding bus at Sri Nagar bus stop, for going
home when police caught me. Witness Akbar who had
deposed in the court that he had apprehended
Shaukat and me in Sri Nagar had conducted a raid
at my shop about a year prior to December 2001
and told me that I was selling fake surgical
instruments and he took Rs 5000/- from me. I was
tortured at Special Cell and one Bhoop Singh even
compelled me to take urine and I saw family of S.
A.R. Geelani also there, Geelani was in miserable
condition. He was not in a position to stand. We
were taken to Doctor for examination but
instructions used to be issued that we have to
tell Doctor that everything was alright with a
threat that if we do not do so we be again
tortured."

He then asks the court's permission to add some more information.

"Mohammad the slain terrorist of Parliament
attack had come along with me from Kashmir. The
person who handed him over to me is Tariq. Tariq
is working with Security Force and S.T.F JK
Police. Tariq told me that if I face any problem
due to Mohammad he will help me as he knew the
security forces and S.T.F very well... Tariq had
told me that I just have to drop Mohammad at
Delhi and do nothing else. And if I would not
take Mohammad with me to Delhi I would be
implicated in some other case. I under these
circumstances brought Mohammad to Delhi under a
compulsion without knowing he was a terrorist."

So now we have a picture emerging of someone who
could be a key player. 'Witness Akbar' (PW 62),
Mohd Akbar, Head Constable, Parimpora Police
Station, the J&K policeman who signed the Seizure
Memo at the time of Afzal's arrest. In  a letter
to Sushil Kumar, his Supreme Court lawyer, Afzal
describes a chilling moment at one point in the
trial. In the court, Witness Akbar, who had come
from Srinagar to testify about the Seizure Memo,
reassured Afzal in Kashmiri that "his family was
alright". Afzal immediately recognised that this
was a veiled threat. Afzal also says that after
he was arrested in Srinagar he was taken to the
Parimpora police station and beaten, and plainly
told that his wife and family would suffer dire
consequences if he did not co-operate. (We
already know that Afzal's brother Hilal had been
held in illegal detention by the SOG during some
crucial months.)

In this letter, Afzal describes how he was
tortured in the STF camp-with electrodes on his
genitals and chillies and petrol in his anus. He
mentions the name of Dy Superintendent of Police
Dravinder Singh who said he needed him to do a
'small job' for him in Delhi. He also says that
some of the phone numbers mentioned in the
chargesheet can be traced to an STF camp in
Kashmir.


   Protests against Afzal's hanging in Srinagar

   It is Afzal's story that gives us a glimpse into
what life is really like in the Kashmir Valley.
It's only in the Noddy Book version we read about
in our newspapers that Security Forces battle
Militants and innocent Kashmiris are caught in
the cross-fire. In the adult version, Kashmir is
a valley awash with militants, renegades,
security forces, double-crossers, informers,
spooks, blackmailers, blackmailees,
extortionists, spies, both Indian and Pakistani
intelligence agencies, human rights activists,
NGOs and unimaginable amounts of unaccounted-for
money and weapons.There are not always clear
lines that demarcate the boundaries between all
these things and people, it's not easy to tell
who is working for whom.

Truth, in Kashmir, is probably more dangerous
than anything else. The deeper you dig, the worse
it gets. At the bottom of the pit is the SOG and
STF that Afzal talks about. These are the most
ruthless, indisciplined and dreaded elements of
the Indian security apparatus in Kashmir. Unlike
the more formal forces, they operate in a
twilight zone where policemen, surrendered
militants, renegades and common criminals do
business. They prey upon the local population,
particularly in rural Kashmir. Their primary
victims are the thousands of young Kashmiri men
who rose up in revolt in the anarchic uprising of
the early '90s and have since surrendered and are
trying to live normal lives.

In 1989, when Afzal crossed the border to be
trained as a militant, he was only 20 years old.
He returned with no training, disillusioned with
his experience. He put down his gun and enrolled
himself in Delhi University. In 1993 without ever
having been a practising militant, he voluntarily
surrendered to the Border Security Force (BSF).
Illogically enough, it was at this point that his
nightmares began. His surrender was treated as a
crime and his life became a hell. Can young
Kashmiri men be blamed if the lesson they draw
from Afzal's story is that it would be not just
stupid, but insane to surrender their weapons and
submit to the vast range of myriad cruelties the
Indian State has on offer for them?

   The story of Mohammed Afzal has enraged
Kashmiris because his story is their story too.
What has happened to him could have happened, is
happening and has happened to thousands of young
Kashmiri men and their families. The only
difference is that their stories are played out
in the dingy bowels of joint interrogation
centres, army camps and police stations where
they have been burned, beaten, electrocuted,
blackmailed and killed, their bodies thrown out
of the backs of trucks for passers-by to find.
Whereas Afzal's story is being performed like a
piece of medieval theatre on the national stage,
in the clear light of day, with the legal
sanction of a 'fair trial', the hollow benefits
of a 'free press' and all the pomp and ceremony
of a so-called democracy.

If Afzal is hanged, we'll never know the answer
to the real question: Who attacked the Indian
Parliament? Was it the Lashkar-e-Toiba? The
Jaish-e-Mohammed? Or does the answer lie
somewhere deep in the secret heart of this
country that we all live in and love and hate in
our own beautiful, intricate, various, and thorny
ways?

There ought to be a Parliamentary Inquiry into
the December 13 attack on Parliament. While the
inquiry is pending, Afzal's family in Sopore must
be protected because they are vulnerable hostages
in this bizarre story.

To hang Mohammed Afzal without knowing what
really happened is a misdeed that will not easily
be forgotten. Or forgiven. Nor should it be.

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