Dilip Simeon, The
Telegraph, Calcutta, Nov 7, 2006
Is
it of the very essence of truth to be impotent and of the very
essence of power to be deceitful? And what kind of reality does truth
possess if it is powerless in the public realm? :
Hannah
Arendt, in Truth and Politics
Public
opinion is now debating the death penalty awarded to Afzal Guru in
connection with the 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament. The debate
is becoming a shouting match, but is an opportunity for us to think
about the phenomenon of virtuous murder, of which judicial executions
no less than political killings are a part.
A
certain line of thinking places the roots of political violence in
poverty and backwardness. A greater part of the explanation may lie
in the experience of humiliation. The idea of justice is rooted in
the sense of fairness. Unfair treatment gives rise to anger, which
shifts towards revenge when it finds no redress. Fairness requires
that wrong-doings be acknowledged. If the wrong-doers do not accept
they have done wrong, society may render such acknowledgement to the
victims. When even this is not forthcoming, violent emotions and
deeds become probable. Such deeds are seen as crimes by one side and
as justice by the other. When your anguish is greeted by silence, you
want to make an explosive noise. Bhagat Singh's bomb in the
Legislative Assembly was meant to "make the deaf hear". (The risk
associated with loud noise is deafness on all sides). Where
communities are pitted against each other, we enter the dark portals
of collective guilt, innocent victims and faceless avengers, of
killing as a means of obtaining recompense.
Consider
that other ageless phenomenon, the double-standard. Humans have been
sensitive to the terrible burden that killing imposes upon us. Hence
we have always asked the Almighty to salve our consciences. Our
ambivalence is exemplified in the ancient Judaeo-Christian debate on
the Sixth Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Kill. Did God mean Thou
Shalt Not Murder? Pacifist Christians insist upon the first
meaning. Crusading Christians require the second. A current of
thought in India has named Gandhi's assassination Gandhi-vadh,
rather than hatya. Godse considered his act to be an act of
justice. Undoubtedly V.D. Savarkar (whose portrait adorns the halls
of Parliament) thought so too. What ideals do our leaders wish to
uphold by honouring a chief accused in the Gandhi murder trial?
Afzal
didn't kill anyone. If he may be hanged for enabling the attack on
Parliament, is there not prima-facie evidence of politicians and
policemen enabling carnages in Delhi and Gujarat in 1984 and 2002?
How many of them have been brought to justice? The handful of
convicts are underprivileged persons - the big fish are flourishing.
In 1987 over 40 Muslims of Meerut were allegedly murdered by the
Armed Constabulary. The case took eighteen years to come to court,
with delaying tactics resorted to even by parties that claim to
defend minority rights. Sometimes the phrase "rule of law" sounds
farcical. The Indian establishment has regularly suborned the justice
system to protect a certain class of criminal. Policemen in
dereliction of duty end up with promotions and enablers of mass
murder get hailed as heroes. Why is this contempt for human life any
less culpable than the attack on Parliament?
In
modern times, devotion to great causes has acquired a quasi-religious
fervour, even when the devotees use secular language. Albert Camus
named our time the age of historical murder. These habits of
mind cut across the political spectrum. Our tradition of militancy
includes crusades for self-determination and people's wars for
classless society. In August 2000, nearly 100 people were killed in
eight massacres in Kashmir. They included Amarnath pilgrims and some
members of a Kashmiri Muslim family. Most of them were brick kiln
workers from central India and Bihar. (Revolutionaries are not very
exercised at the annihilation of workers by jehadis of either
Muslim or Hindu variety). On August 13, 2004, 9 school children were
killed by the ULFA in Upper Assam. On August 15, the CPI-Maoist shot
dead nine persons in Andhra Pradesh, including a legislator, his son,
driver and a municipal employee. On September 12, 2005 it slit the
throats of 17 villagers in Giridih (Jharkhand). This February saw 25
tribals dead in a landmine blast in Chhattisgarh. Another blast on
March 25 killed 13 persons. The Maoists apologised for the latter,
calling it a mistake. It is such ‘mistakes' that motivate
opponents of the death penalty to demand its abolition. There were no
apologies for 60 people killed in Delhi's Sarojini Nagar on October
29, 2005. Nor for the 200 dead and 625 injured in Mumbai this July.
Every
act of violence leaves a lifetime of trauma for its victims, some of
whom become avengers in their turn. But one senses irony when
sympathisers of militancy ask for a revocation of the death penalty.
Do they oppose it in principle or only when one of their own is
sentenced to death? Why are they silent when militants administer
death sentences to all and sundry? Does it make any sense to attach
political threats to appeals for clemency? And can the Hindu
nationalists understand how the well-wishers of Graham Staines feel
when they see Dara Singh celebrated as a hero?
The
list is endless. The Salwa Judum vigilantes of Chhattisgarh have
allegedly committed rapes and killings. A recent citizen's report
documented the vicious activities of this state-supported militia but
it also noted the Maoist's brutality. Like their opponents they too
kill without presumption of innocence or chance for appeals for
mercy. The comrades should think about the impact of their activities
upon the grand ideal of socialism. They reject the legitimacy of the
Indian state, but their own political behaviour is highly autocratic.
Should socialists hold themselves to a higher or a lower standard
than the system they criticise? Tragically, those who wanted to
prepare the soil for a just society have now become judge and
executioner rolled into one - a pure version of tyranny. Along with
right-wing radicals, their own legitimacy is grounded on nothing more
substantial than outraged sentiment and a claim to superior
understanding of Indian reality. Does this give them the right to
kill anyone they want? India's ruling elites as well their critics
are playing host to a nihilist element that grows more confident the
longer the democratic conscience clings to its double standard on
political murder. The concept of ‘collateral damage' is not
confined to George Bush's dictionary.
Our
radicals have changed the world for the worse. From militant
communalists and nationalists to those who kill for the sake of
People or Historical Destiny, too many of us believe in the death
penalty. Those demanding death for Afzal are mobilising relatives of
the dead policemen. The families deserve our sympathy, but in any
case Afzal is due for life imprisonment. What good will it do to end
his life? Policemen may now sympathise with the families of two other
murder victims, Jessica Lal and Nitish Katara both of whom have seen
their hopes for justice dashed to the ground. The main suspects in
these cases are relatives of Congressmen. Jessica was shot in clear
view of the high and mighty. Do those in charge of our criminal
justice system possess a clean conscience when it comes to
restitution for the victims of killers? Restraint and compassion are
the best means by which to contain the rising tide of political
violence. For a system with so much blood on its hands, the hanging
of Mohammad Afzal Guru would be yet another example of its
breathtaking hypocrisy.
Speak
the truth
Stop
the killing