The Congress, as always, is undecided what to do about a minority minister who 
has done little but asked a question that is all over the net in what can be 
described as alternative news sites. How did Hemant Karkare and the others with 
him die? It is a simple question, but so far the authorities have been 
amazingly unclear about the answer. The result is that while the question might 
have fed into the various conspiracy theories that are being forwarded by 
otherwise sane persons, it actually stands alone as a question of justice. How 
did he die? Who informed him of the terror attack? Why did he and the other 
senior officers all decide to get into one vehicle along with four ---or was it 
five---constables and head in the same direction? How is it that one constable 
survived? The terrorists reportedly used the same car to move on. How is it 
that in the burst of fire that killed at least seven persons inside that car, 
it was still in a condition to move? And did the terrorists throw out the 
bodies, if so where exactly? The questions are basic questions that should have 
been asked by the crime reporters on the job, but obviously that part of the 
chapter has been deliberately closed with just copious tears being shed for the 
'brave' officers without any investigation into how they actually died. This is 
not to say that the terrorists did not kill them. This is to say that most 
probably they did, but how. The police story does not stand muster, so what are 
they hiding. 

Those gunning for Antulay's head will have to admit that for once in his life 
the Maharashtra politician has shown some courage. He has not only asked the 
question, but he has stood by it instead of apologizing profusely to Sonia 
Gandhi and the nation for the 'embarassment' he has caused the party and the 
government. The Congress, of course, now does not know whether to own or disown 
him. Judging from Digvijay Singh's remarks it has decided not to act against 
him for the moment, although it will not be premature to say that he will be 
persona non grata at all party functions. 

Dissent is a fundamental right in a democracy. The right to free speech and 
expression ensures this. It is therefore, really a sad commentary on the 
intolerance that has crept into the system that whenever any one speaks outside 
the line set by the government of the day and its pliant media, he or she is 
immediately pilloried as a traitor, as an anti national, as communal. 
Adjectives are hurled by these supposed custodians of India's nationhood at a 
moment's notice, with no effort being made to understand the reasons for the 
doubts expressed, and the questions asked. 

The Front Page is carrying two stories today, one of a Muslim techie being 
arrested for being the son of a leader who had been rallying public opinion in 
Azamgarh against the Batla house encounter in the Okhla area in New Delhi. The 
other is of how the police plants evidence to arrest the innocent. If true, 
these are pointers to the rot in the system and any sensitive government will 
intervene to release the innocent, and pull up the police and the 
administration for subverting the law. Instead those seeking to draw attention 
to the injustice will be placed in the dock, and made to answer not just by the 
government but by a belligerent media just how they dared to question the 
system, the establishment and worse still, the ruling elite. This will not 
strengthen India, but weaken her secular and democratic foundation.



*Just bringing the site http://thefrontpage.in to your notice. Currently has 
the latest on the terror laws passed by parliament.*
 

Reply via email to