The secular establishment shrugged off the
sentences as their real target is not the 32 convicted, but Narendra Modi. For over
ten years, he has been pilloried by the secular establishment, for what he had
not done rather than (at least) acknowledging what he had done to contain the
2002 riots.
First, let us see
what he had done:
He had had the
army deployed in 48 hours. His police fired 10,000 rounds of bullets to quell the
mobs. In the process some 77 Hindus and 93 Muslims were killed. 27,901 Hindus and
7,651 Muslims were arrested as a preventive measure. (According to some sources,
the number of Hindus arrested was as high as 35,000.) The riots rendered 40,000 Hindus homeless, a
fact which was not even whispered by the secular
media. They were sheltered in relief camps for a long time alongside the
Muslims uprooted from their homes. Finally, one has to keep in view that 254
Hindus were also killed in the riots along with 790 Muslims. Therefore the
riots were not as one-sided as they are made out to be.
Let us see what
would have satisfied the secular
establishment:
1. The bodies of
the 59 Hindus (more than half of whom were women and children) who were burnt
to death should not have been brought to Ahmedabad to be handed over to their
families. Would the secular
establishment rather that they were buried in Godhra as orphans? Did they not
deserve some consideration in death, of a decent cremation, when they were
denied life? Should their kith and kin not be allowed to keen in grief and pay
their last respects - to the unfortunate victims of a pernicious ideology, who
had to die for no fault of theirs?
2. The police/army
should have taken sterner action. It is difficult to comprehend this logic.
What could the police or for that matter the army, could have done more? Should
the police/army have shot everyone at sight and killed hundreds of people? Had
the Gujarat Home Ministry given such an order would it have been obeyed? What
would have happened if the police had disobeyed an order of the government? P.
V. Narasimha Rao had faced a similar dilemma in 1992 at the time of the ‘Rama
Janma Bhumi – Babri Masjid’ demolition. He too had been accused of not calling
in the army to shoot the agitators at sight. (What else would he order the army
to do?) In the end Narasimha Rao had decided that it would not do for the army to
revolt. (This is according to an unimpeachable secular source!)
3. The courts
should have worked faster and hanged everyone accused (especially the
politicians including Narendra Modi), with the least possible delay. How could
the Gujarat government have facilitated this? Why, by somehow rendering the defence
of the accused in the courts, ineffective. In other words the state government
should have obstructed the course of justice, and do to the Hindus what it has
been, though falsely, been accused of doing to the Muslims.
However, a despicable aspect of the saga of (Naroda Patiya) was the conduct of the secular intelligentsia which circulated a story about a womb being ripped open and a foetus gouged out. Arundhati Roy concocted the story in her article in Outlook of May 4, 2002. It was not exactly calculated to bring about harmony between communities at a time when the atmosphere was still rife for another round of explosive violence.Thousands of people from both communities uprooted from homes were still living in camps. In view of the reputation of the 'source' the story was repeated without verification, thousands of times since. Human rights outfits of dubious reputation like New York's Human Rights Watch went to town with it.
Three postscripts with
respect to the judgement deserve mention here:
1. This could also
be a rare judgement in which the principle of secularism as defined in the
Indian constitution was invoked in delivering judgement in a criminal case. (p.
1955)
3. The judge also
dispels the myth about a foetus being gouged out of a womb when a pregnant
woman was killed. In her opinion only a trained gynaecologist or someone more
experienced in such procedures could perform such an act. (p. 1686-89) The secular establishment perpetuated the
myth unmindful or oblivious to the consequences of putting out such a story,
especially during the early days of the riots when the atmosphere was palpably incendiary.