http://www.counterview.net

Tuesday, May 12, 2015
"Failure" to prosecute Modi for 2002 riots: Gujarat workers',
activists' meet blames Indian judicial system

By Our Representative

As the day draws closer for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to celebrate
his one year in office (May 26), a well-attended meeting in
Ahmedabad's town hall sought to sharply focus his "culpability" during
the 2002 Gujarat riots. The occasion was the first death anniversary
of well-known Gujarat High Court advocate Mukul Sinha, who shot into
prominence for cross examination of government officials at the
Nanavati Commission, appointed by Modi as Gujarat chief minister to
"investigate" the anti-Muslim riots.

The commission's final report, which is said to have given Modi a
clean chit, has still not been made public.

Speaking on the occasion, Justice Hosteb Suresh - one of the three
members the Indian People's Tribunal fact-finding team headed by
ex-Supreme Court judge VR Krishna Iyer to inquire into the Gujarat
riots between March and April 2002 - blamed the justice system of
India for failing to persecute Modi. Calling the riots genocide,
Suresh, was former Mumbai High Court judge, regretted that the Supreme
Court handed over the proceedings against Modi to a judicial
magistrate.

Girish Patel, veteran Gujarat high court lawyer, also spoke in a similar tone.

Citing the report by Raju Ramachandran, amicus curiae (friend of the
court) for the Supreme Court of India in the 2002 Gujarat violence
case, Suresh underlined, "Enough material was available made by
Ramachandran to prosecute Modi. The Supreme Court should have
proceeded with a chargesheet against Modi. Yet, it decided to hand
over the proceedings to magistrate. Tell me, which magistrate will
dare prosecute him?"

Majority of those who attended the meeting included workers and
victims of the 2002 riots.
Suresh further said, "The People's Commission had found enough
evidence against Modi. However, the judicial system did not take
cognizance of the report. There is nothing new about it. The same
thing happened with the Sri Krishna Commission report on Mumbai riots
of 2002-03, when there many innocent people were killed, there was
evidence of police barbarity. Yet, nothing happened. Nobody has been
persecuted. The same was the case with the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in
Delhi."

A book, which is collection of articles by Sinha and well-known human
rights activists, titled, "Passion for Justice: Mukul Sinha's
Pioneering Work" was released on the occasion. Edited by Arvind
Narrain of the Alternative Law Forum, Bengaluru, it carries articles
on Sinha by Mahtab Alam, Nirjhari Sinha and Pratik Sinha, Upendra
Baxi, Manisha Sethi, Mihir Desai, Cedric Prakash, Pravin Mishra, Harsh
Mander, Gagan Sethi, Ajit Sahi, and Saumya Uma.
One of Sinha's articles also blames the judicial system for failure to
prosecute Modi. It says, Modi was "constitutionally responsible even
if he was not criminally responsible because he failed to prevent
lives of people." He admitted, "Actions of the state are difficult to
pin down within the existing criminal law framework as there is no
doctrine of vicarious criminal responsibility by which you can make
state officials vicariously liable for actions of those who were
within their control."

Two human rights awards instituted in the name of Sinha were given -
one to Ram Niwas of the Maruti-Suzuki Workers' Union, who led a
relentless struggle against the management in 2013, and another to
Bablu and Elena Devi, representing Extra Judicial Execution Victim
Families Association of Manipur,

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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