From: b sabha <bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com>

http://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/dont-muzzle-the-young/296744
[http://www.outlookindia.com/public/uploads/gallery/20160224/kanhaiya1_20160224.jpg]<http://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/dont-muzzle-the-young/296744>

Don't Muzzle The Young - 
outlookindia.com<http://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/dont-muzzle-the-young/296744>
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People see harsh laws being invoked against those who dissent but the ordinary 
law of the land is either not enforced or done in a way that appears an 
eye-wash.



People see harsh laws being invoked against those who dissent but the ordinary 
law of the land is either not enforced or done in a way that appears an 
eye-wash.
FRAZER MASCARENHAS 
S.J.<http://www.outlookindia.com/people/Frazer-Mascarenhas-SJ/16818>



[http://www.outlookindia.com/public/uploads/gallery/20160224/kanhaiya1_20160224.jpg]
JAWAHARLAL NEHRU UNIVERSITY STUDENTS TAKE PART IN SOLIDARITY MARCH FOR UMAR 
KHALID AND ANIRBAN BHATTACHARYA WHO ARE FACING CHARGES OF SEDITION, IN JNU 
CAMPUS IN NEW DELHI.

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The events in India during the last few months call for discussion, dialogue 
and concrete action. But it does appear that the national debates are all about 
the wrong things. Or perhaps we are reduced to debating about something we 
should all be able to take for granted after almost 70 years of Independence – 
the freedom to debate!


The JNU has always stood out as an academic centre of excellence, a place for 
critical thinking, debate and dialogue (the latter emphasizes listening, rather 
than shouting) and mistakes will be made which need to be addressed but do the 
objectionable slogans, shouted by a few, warrant police intervention and 
immediate sedition charges? Do clashes between two student groups in Hyderabad 
warrant the suspension of only one side, that too, at the direct intervention 
of central authorities?


On the other hand, enforcement of ordinary law and order, under the full gaze 
of the police force, in a protected area like that of the courts, not once but 
on successive days, is blatantly ignored. The case of the attack on the Latur 
police sub-inspector of a minority community is another striking case of some 
groups being allowed to take the law into their own hands.


Are these only isolated cases of dereliction of duty or is there a pattern? 
Eminent people, from all walks of life, acknowledged and awarded by the country 
for their contributions to India, seem to see a pattern of intolerance. They 
see harsh laws being invoked against those who dissent but the ordinary law of 
the land is either not enforced or done in a way that appears an eye-wash.


What is the dialogue we plead for? The precious lives of the millions of common 
powerless people in India and what affects them – isn’t this worth the centre 
stage? Thousands of farmers are committing suicide because of relatively small 
loans they cannot repay, while the national banks are writing off thousands of 
crores of what are euphemistically called NPAs. Our cities and even the rural 
areas around them are choking in smog even worse than China’s, the health of 
our people, especially of children, is being severely compromised, but 
environmental laws are being relaxed across the country in the name of 
corporate development.


Even Bill Gates, the technology moghul and icon of the capitalistic world, 
wrote a few days ago that, “only an Energy Miracle can save us” and yet groups 
campaigning on environmental issues in India are being labeled and prosecuted 
as anti-national. Education is a crucial need of the hour with the demographic 
dividend of millions of young people but the allocation to education and even 
to regular scientific research, already woefully inadequate, has been cut 
further during the last two years, inspite of wonderful pronouncements of a 
high growth rate of 7%+ (should this increase not be reflected in something so 
crucial as education?).


The state of public health may be even more precarious, with local health 
authorities worried of a major set-back in campaigns against HIV and TB, due to 
the unimaginable cut in public allocation of finance for health in the country. 
Our suburban trains in Mumbai and Thane are so overcrowded at peak times that 
every day an average of 5 people are falling off and losing their lives in the 
effort to get to work (life unfortunately is cheap when it comes to ordinary 
people), yet we all know that the attention and finance allocated to Bullet 
trains and Metro lines, desirable to some of us as they are, will not be 
affordable to those who are forced to take the ordinary public transport.


So, isn’t there an emergency situation in India, regarding the precious lives 
being lost or degraded, which we should all be dialoguing about? This is not 
about supporting any of the political parties vying for power. It is about 
joining in the development debate and taking sides – what are the best options 
open to our country to deliver authentic development in terms of human welfare 
to the majority of women and men in India – not just the lucky few.


The worst method of doing this is to muzzle the young, the student, the member 
of civil society who raises an issue, the people who are ready to and can make 
a difference. The human right of free expression and of profession of belief 
and ideology is what the international community and our Indian Constitution 
bases itself on. Encouraging animal spirits, foreign investment, international 
collaboration in facing the immense challenges of the globe and specifically of 
India, cannot be done along with the trampling of human rights.


Protests from students, scientists, public figures, ordinary people from civil 
society and all interested in true human welfare in our nation, will bring 
forth results because the international community is watching. Those who we 
have entrusted with the task of governing, we are sure, will be responsive to 
people’s participation and will keep in check, through the ordinary means of 
law and order, groups that want to distract the nation from what concerns the 
lives of the millions. And if intolerance, or rather, dereliction of duty to 
protect human rights, is allowed or encouraged, the motives of the ones in 
authority will be clear to all.

________________________________

(Dr Frazer Mascarenhas S.J. is the former Principal, St. Xavier’s College, 
Mumbai; he is presently involved in non-formal education for slum children in 
Mumbai and Thane.)

This web-exclusive column does not appear in print magazine.



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