Here's is the full text of a statement issued by Dipankar
Bhattacharya, General Secretary of  the Communist Party of India
(Marxist-Leninist)-Liberation.
* * *


*The Ayodhya Verdict:*

A Blow to the Spirit of Modern India

On the eve of the Allahabad High Court verdict on Ayodhya, we had said the
verdict would be a “test case for India’s secularism, democracy and
justice.” Now, following a close look at the shocking verdict, we must say
it has failed this test in every possible way. 30 September, 2010 will now
be bracketed with 6 December, 1992. Eighteen years after the dastardly
physical demolition of the Babri Masjid, we have now seen its judicial
demolition, a verdict that flies in the face of the basic principles of
justice and rule of law, and challenges the fundamental spirit of a secular,
democratic modern India.

The High Court was supposed to decide on the title suit regarding the
disputed site. It is well known that the BJP and its Sangh siblings were all
along wary of the court deciding on this case on the plea that the whole
issue concerned “faith” and there could be no adjudication over “faith”. It
was clear to them that they had no legal basis for their claim and hence
they chose the way of cheating the country. They assured everybody that the
law of the land would be honoured, and then betrayed their own words to
demolish the mosque through a communal-fascistic mobilisation in broad
daylight.

Today, the Sangh is jubilant that the High Court has turned “faith” into
law. All the three judges have accepted the fact that the idols of Ram, Sita
and Bharat were smuggled in from outside on the intervening night of 22-23
December, 1949. Yet the judges have ruled by 2-1 majority that the “disputed
structure” was not a mosque because it was apparently constructed by
demolishing a Hindu religious structure and hence according to the tenets of
Islam, it could not have the sanctity of a mosque! The other judge has of
course differed on both counts – but the majority view prevailed.

The verdict is based heavily on two factors – the so-called ‘archaeological
evidence’ marshalled by the ASI in its 2003 report (two previous ASI reports
in 1970 and 1992 mentioned nothing of the sort) that there was a Hindu
temple on the site before the mosque was built, and the ‘faith’ held by many
Hindus that the disputed area is the birthplace of Lord Ram. The ASI report
has been widely questioned and rejected by a whole range of historians and
can at best be treated as a piece of speculative conjecture. The other
aspect of ‘faith’ is just that – faith which can by no means be treated as
an evidence to decide a title suit.

After conceding the Ramjanambhoomi claim on such thoroughly questionable
grounds, the judges sought to give the whole thing the appearance of a
reconciliatory measure whereby the disputed land would be apportioned into
three equal parts with one part going to the waqf board. Reconciliation can
only be attempted and achieved on the basis of truth and justice. In this
case, both truth (at least recorded historical truth) and justice have been
sacrificed at the altar of this phoney reconciliation formula and hence it
is a compound travesty of all three. Can there ever be a dignified
compromise by compromising truth and justice?

After Gujarat genocide, the BJP had been steadily losing ground in most
parts of the country. Ever since its debacle in the 2009 Lok Sabha election
– its second successive defeat in five years, the party seemed virtually
clueless as to how to arrest its continuing state of demoralisation and
desperation. Now the Allahabad High Court verdict has breathed some fresh
life into the demoralised and desperate saffron camp. Advani has already
described the verdict as heralding a new chapter in the country’s history of
national integration. In all likelihood, an emboldened BJP will now reopen
the whole gamut of its ‘suspended agenda’ and refuel its Hindutva campaign.

The judicial trajectory of the case will now reach the Supreme Court. It
remains to be seen if and how far the Supreme Court can salvage the spirit
of law and justice and heal the post-Ayodhya wound on the body polity and
the composite culture of the country that has only been rendered deeper and
more acute by the Allahabad High Court verdict. Every effort must be made to
make sure that the glorious tradition of India’s composite culture and the
secular democratic vision of modern India prevail over the Sangh brigade’s
conspiracy to redefine India on retrograde majoritarian lines.


-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To post to this group, send email to humanrights-movem...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
humanrights-movement+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to