Monday, February 16, 2009

Moral cop as Minister

Lest we forget

“Nothing is wrong in Moral Policing.”

- Mr S Suresh Kumar, Minister of State for Law, Justice, Human Rights, Parliamentary Affairs and Urban Development. Government of the State of Karnataka, India,   in an interview with R Guru Prasad in The Organiser, New Delhi Dated 22 February 2009-02-16

For the record, inn his election nomination application  in March 2004, Mr S Suresh Kumar, son of the late Mr  P V Suryanarayan Rao admitted in a  sworn affidavit that:

“The following cases are pending against me in which cognisance has been taken by the Court {VIII ACMMM Bangalore City} dated 23 November 1996 at the High Grounds police station under Cr Number 631/96 under section 1543, 147, 148, 323, 332, 353,427, 149 Indian Penal Code and Section 103 of the Karnataka police act for holding political demonstration in connection with Beauty pageant.”

Karnataka, more than Maharashtra and Gujarat, now sees the maximum number of acts of mob and individual violence against Muslims, Christians, women, beauty pageants, and pubs and so on deemed to be against Indian culture as defined by the Sangh Parivar.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Orissa Update 12 February 2009

THE INDIA UPDATE

ANTI-CHRISTIAN VIOLENCE SINCE AUGUST 24, 2008

Updated February 2009

 1. ORISSA          The Orissa government admits that six months after the Hindutva fury was let loose on a hapless Christian population of Kandhamal District, it is still not able to ensure the safety and security of thousands of Christians who cannot still return to their village homes. "From an initial strength of 25000, the numbers in government refugee camps have come down to 4000. Of these 4000 we have taken 2500 people to transition relief camps near their respective villages. Currently only 1500 people are staying in block-level relief camps in Tikabali, K Nuagaon and Raikia," Kandhamal distinct collector Krishan Kumar told The Indian Express. Behind the wordplay, it is obvious that there is no home still for these hapless people. The government has no count of people in private camps, some as far away as in Srikakulam in the neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh and the thousands of others who have taken shelter with relatives in other towns and cities or are internally displaced persons in New Delhi and other cities and towns, seeking small jobs. It is particularly distressing that many of the worst affected were families of priests and pastors, nuns and religious workers who were specially targeted by the mobs. These families find it almost impossible to return still. The State is also coming under stress because the Union government in New Delhi has more than halved the strength of the Central Reserve Police Force in the district, which has come down to about 3,000 from the height of 6,000. Top officers had told John Dayal that police would be deployed from surrounding areas to keep the saturation in Kandhamal. But there are doubts if the Special Police newly recruited will be of any help, as most of the young men given jobs remain from the aggressor sections. Church authorities have said that young and healthy, and educated, Christian youth were rejected when they responded to government advertisements seeking jobs as special police officers in Kandhamal. The government figures of about 150 churches, prayer houses and pastoral training centers and 3600 houses in Kandhamal damaged in the violence is also disputed by Christians. Even government’s own initial assessment was of about 250 or more religious place attacked.  Government has been selective in identifying religious places damaged, keeping out small hut churches in forest villages, for instance, and not counting thatch huts which were  homes of many a  Dalit Christians and which was destroyed in the widespread arson which lasted nearly two months. The government is in a hurry to evacuate the refugee camps, possibly before elections due later in April by current indications. Christians say their attackers still roam free and have been granted bail, other than those arrested in the rape of Sister M, the Catholic born in Sambalpur, who was attacked in Nuagaon on 25 August last year. The Criminal Investigation Department of the Orissa Police has filed the charge sheet before a judicial magistrate in the district. The nun had identified main accused Santosh Patnaik and Kartik Pradhan during the test identification parade held on January 5. Submitting a preliminary charge sheet before Dolagobinda Barik, Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate of Balliguda, this afternoon, the CID has accused 10 people of either rape or abetting the rape. They are Jhuria Pradhan (50) and his son Kartik Pradhan (22), Saroj Bhadei and his son Muna Bhadei, brothers Tapas Patnaik and Santosh Patnaik, Biren Sahu, Somanath Pradhan, Gajendra Digal and Jharalal Behera. The CID has given the sequence of events that led to the rape in detail in the charge sheet. The CID has submitted a set of another 50 names that were part of the mob that assaulted her, and has requested the court to issue non-bailable warrants against them. These 50 people are still at large. The case was handed over to the CID on October 3 after the Balliguda police sat on the case for about 40 days. The local police did not even pick up the report of the nun’s medical examination till the media reported it, weeks after the Church had protested. Meanwhile, the police have also filed a charge sheet in the murder of Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Lakhmanananda Saraswati and his four in his ashram at Jalespeta. Maoists claimed to have carried out the assassination to punish the Hindutva leader for his activities in the region. The police have named seven people in its first 270 page charge sheet against seven people arrested in the case. The agency has named Duryodhan Sunamajhi, Munda Badamajhi, Sanatana Badamajhi, Vijay Sanseth, Gananath Chalanseth, Bhaskar Sunamajhi, Budhdev Naik. Naik is said to be a hardcore and others are active sympathisers of the Left-wing extremists.

A brief recall of the figures at the height of the violence August- October 2008:

ORISSA {Kandhamal and other affected districts’ data}:         

14 (of 30)         Districts hit

315                  Villages destroyed

4,640               Houses burnt [State government earlier estimates 4,215]

54,000             Homeless initially

120                  People murdered

7                      Priests/ Pastors killed

10                    Fathers/Pastors/Nuns injured

 2                     Rapes confirmed [One of Nun]

252                   Churches destroyed [estimated by State government]

13                      Schools, colleges destroyed

 

 

 

 

2. KARNATAKA      

 8 (of 29)           Districts affected

33                    Churches attacked update again

 53                    Christians injured in attacks, including Nuns assaulted by state police.

3. TAMIL NADU                     

 12                     Churches attacked

 4. MADHYA PRADESH    

5                       Churches damaged

5. KERALA  

4                      Churches damaged

 6. DELHI                         2         

Churches damaged/destroyed [This update does not include incidents of violence and persecution witnessed in many other states, but not linked with the August 2008 outbreak.]