*Tsundur Massacre*

*Normalising Injustice the Judicial Way*

*-- subhash gatade*



1.

Tsundur, Guntur, A.P. which had made headlines way back in 1991 when eight
dalits were lynched by a 400 strong armed mob of Reddys supposedly to teach
the dalits a lesson, is again in the news.The recent judgement of the A.P
highcourt has overturned the judgement of the Special courts and has
acquitted all the accused involved in the case for 'want of evidence'.

As rightly noted by Human Rights Forum (HRF) the judgement is 'brazen
injustice' and is 'reflective of upper caste anti-dalit bias' and 'betrays
insensitivity in the judiciary to an inhuman caste atrocity.' It is
expected that the state does not waste time in moving the Supreme Court to
get this retrograde judgement overturned and render justice to the families
of dalits.

What is more disturbing and shocking is the fact that when the Special
Court formed to deliberate on the case had finally given its verdict seven
years back, it was considered a 'historic' in very many ways.The conviction
of the perpetrators - twenty one of the accused were life imprisonment and
35 of the accused were asked to serve one year rigorous imprisonment - was
considered a significant milestone in the ongoing dalit emancipation
movement.

2

The judgement by the special court had demonstrated the immense
possibilities inherent in the SC and ST Prevention of Atrocities Act (1989)
which till date remain on paper. As rightly noted it was the first time in
the nearly twenty year old trajectory of this act that special courts had
to be set up at the scene of offence.

It is noteworthy that Dalits in Tsundur were so united that neither they
accepted any summons from the courts nor they just ever went to court which
was situated at some distanct place from the village. They demanded in
unison that the courts should come to them and the government had to
concede to their demand and set up special courts in a school premises.

They had also demanded that they be provided with a Public Prosecutor and a
judge who has a positive track record while dealing with cases of dalit
atrocities. After lot of dilly-dallying the government had complied with
this demand also.

It has been normal in all such cases of dalit atrocities that as time
passes, people including victims and their families loose interest in
continuing their fight for justice. They come under pressure or are coerced
into changing their statement in the courts etc. The significance of the
Tsundur struggle was that the people leading the campaign were successful
in keeping the people mobilised all these years. Tsundur became a rallying
point for different left and democratic forces in the state and it was
harbinger of a new turn in the left politics also which resolved to take up
the issue of caste oppression.

3.

D Dhanraj was a crucial witness to the whole case. He did not falter for a
moment despite tremendous pressure brought upon him by the powerful
Reddys.One could see that Tsundur, the small village in Guntur, had created
many such 'unsung heroes' - ordinary looking people who faced heavy odds so
that they get justice. Merukonda Subbarao, a fifty six year old daily
wage-worker, who had served as the first president of the Tsunduru Victims
Association was another such 'hero' who identified and named forty of the
accused standing in the court room, from among the one hundred and eighty
three accused. It was clear that the whole incident was etched in his
memory so strongly that he did not falter despite the judges requests to
repeat the identification. And who can forget Martyr Anil Kumar, a young
man in his twenties who was in the forefront of the struggle so that the
perpetrators of the massacre are punished without delay. Anil was killed in
a police firing during one of those struggles.

As is clear in every other atrocity against the dalits, the Reddys who have
dominated the state politics since independence, tried with all their might
so that they are allowed to go scot free. Utilising their contacts in the
Judiciary, bureacracy or police administration they tried to delay the
process of justice as long as they could do it.

Attempts were made to buy or coerce the dalits in very many ways and the
state also tried to  play second fiddle to the Reddy's. It felt that by
distributing largesse to the dalits, giving jobs to few of them, awarding
compensation to the victims families they could calm down their yearning
for justice. But dalits in Tsundur wanted nothing less than severe
punishment for the perpetrators.Unitedly they raised a slogan 'Justice not
Welfare'. It was worth emphasising that with their continued resistance
they were able to make Tsundur a key issue in state politics.

4.

A brief recap of the events in this 'historic case' tells us that the upper
caste ( read Reddys' ) used the pretext of  of alleged harassment of a
Reddy girl by a dalit youth in a cinema hall to attack the dalits. The
planned nature of the attack was evidnt also from the fact that within no
time a few hundred strong mob of Reddys wielding traditional weapons (and
few of them carrying modern firearms) descended on the dalit hamlett and
unleashed their fury against the innocents. In fact, sensing an imminent
attack, most of the menfolk had alread left the village. Once the marauders
came to know of this they literally chased the dalits on the road adjoining
the Tungabhadra canal and lynched them one by one.

Looking back it is clear that the preplanned attack against the dalits was
another futile attempt by the Reddys to reassert their age-old authority
which had seen fissures with the growing assertion of dalits. The changed
atmosphere in the village was for everyone to see.Not only many of the
dalits boys and girls had benefitted from the affirmative action programmes
in education, a few among them had even surpassed the Reddys in many
respects. Many of the dalits from the village were working with Indian
Railways. Overall the situation was such that the Dalits had refused to
follow the medieval dictats reserved for them under the *Varna* system.

5.

All that is passe now. The judgement of the high court which has overturned
the verdict of the Special Courts  reminds us that the journey to achieve
justice is going to be a long one.

Any cursory glance at the cases of mass crimes against dalits tells us that
the high court judgement is no exception rather it is the norm.

It was only last year that Patna highcourt acquitted nine out of 10 accused
in the Miyapur massacre for 'lack of evidence,' overturning a lower court’s
order. (July 2013) The Aurangabad Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (SC
and ST) special court judge, Krishna Kant Tripathi, had earlier awarded
life imprisonment to 10 persons on September 20, 2007. The Miyapur massacre
was a major carnage in which the Ranvir Sena killed 32 people, mostly
Dalits, supposedly to avenge an earlier Naxal attack in Senari village of
Jehanabad. A 400-500 people had entered the village and began firing at the
villagers. (16 th June 2000).

The same year one witnessed Patna highcourt overturning another judgement
by the lower court where 11 accused involved in the killings of ten
activists of CPI (ML) in November 1998 had been convicted. One had
witnessed similar reversals in the Bathani Tola massacre - which involved
23 accused - and Laxmanpur Bathe massacre - which saw 58 deaths. In all the
above cases Ranveer Sena was said to be involved but it was allowed to go
'scot free'.

No doubt that the lower courts had convicted the accused - which the high
court later reversed - but a close reading of the cases would make it clear
that loopholes were deliberately left which could facilitate the accused.
e.g. the police had pronounced Ranvir Sena supremo Brahmeshwar Singh
“Mukhiya” the prime accused, an “absconder”. It is a different matter that
this dangerous criminal was languishing in Ara jail since 2002. It may be
added here that when Nitish Kumar, assumed reins of power in 2004, one of
the first thing he did was to disband Justice Amir Das Commission when it
was nearly ready with its report. This commission was appointed in the
immediate aftermath of the Bathe massacre and had gone into great details
about the political patronage, which Ranvir Sena received, from different
mainstream political formations.

6.

It is possible that all this details where the state and its different
organs comes out in rather unflattering terms could be brushed aside as a
story repeated ad nauseam. All the talk of dalit atrocities could be
presented as another extension of the way in which ‘state in the third
world’ unfolds itself. But the key point worth emphasising is that caste
atrocities much like gender oppression or racial atrocities have a
specificity which transcends the binary of ‘state as perpetrator’ and
‘people as victims’ . In fact they implicate the partisan role played by
the people themselves.

The ‘Report on Prevention of Atrocities against SCs ‘ prepared by NHRC (
2004) presents details of the way in which the civil society presents
itself . Here civil society itself becomes a distinct beneficiary of caste
based order and helps perpetuate the existing unequal social reactions and
frustrates attempts to democratize the society because through the
customary arrangements the dominant classes are assured of social control
over people who can continue to abide by their commands without any protest.

Of course the uncivil nature of the civil society presents before us a
unique challenge where the need then becomes to rise above a mere discourse
on civil and constitutional rigths and address the failure of the largest
democracy of the world to go beyond mere form. We have to appreciate that
it concerns the greater hiatus that exists between constitutional
principles and practice and corresponding ethical ones based on a
diametrically opposed ideal.

Everyone has to see that under the purity and pollution based paradigm
which is the cornerstone of our caste system, inequality receives not only
legitimisation as well as sanctification. As inequality is accepted both in
theory and practice, a legal constitution has no bearing on the ethical
foundation of caste-based societies.In fact Dr Ambedkar, the legendary
leader of the oppressed had this very reality in his minds, when he
emphasised the difference between what he called ‘political democracy’ and
’social democracy’, the difference between ‘one person having one vote’ and
‘one person having one value’.

7.

To conclude, one can go on enumerating cases of dalit oppression and
explain the manner in which perpetrators of atrocities against dalits are
'saved' judicially.

Perhaps one can make a beginning with the first massacre of dalits in
independent India when 42 dalits - mainly children and women - were burnt
alive by a gang of marauders belonging to the local upper castes (1969) in
Kizzhevanamani, Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu. Dalits and other exploited people in
that area of Thanjavur had launched an agitation under the leadership of
Communist Party on the question of wages which had infuriated the dominant
caste people.

Here also the judgement by the Courts was disturbing to say the least. The
courts had acquitted all the accused with the specious argument that  it
appears unbelievable that all these members of the upper caste' would have
gone walking to the dalit hamlett/basti.'

It is said that shadows of Kizzhevanamani have continuously hovered around
atrocities against Dalits and adivasis in post independent India. Question
arises how long it is going to continue ?

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