Saturday, October 12, 2019
Death Penalty: Inconsistent Sentencing, Political Mercy Pleas, Erroneous Convictions. Abolition, A Systemic Correction
On August 14, 2004, Dhananjay
Chatterjee an ‘impoverished guard’ in a Kolkata building was hanged. “Although bearing a Brahmin name, Dhananjay
Chatterjee was far from being a member of the Kolkata bhadralok, or intellectual
elite…His execution followed a shrill campaign…”, wrote N. Jayaram: “How India hanged a poor watchman whose guilt was far from established”
(Scroll.in. July 21, 2015. https://bit.ly/35d7FSe). An
emerging 24/7 news channel added its bit to the shrillness of the campaign. The
misfortune of birth status added to Chatterjee’s
misery of poverty. He had spent fourteen years in jail before he was hanged.
President, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam rejected his mercy plea. However, it must be
said in his defence that although the President is vested with the authority to
pardon a criminal under Art. 71 (1) (c) of the Constitution, in
practice, the President merely follows the recommendation of the Home Ministry.
The case did not arouse ‘the quality of mercy’ in the conscience of civil
rights activists. No NGO or civil rights group knocked on the doors of the
Supreme Court to open it in the small hours to hear a revision plea. No
newspaper headlined the next day “And they hanged Dhananjay Chatterjee”!
If the frenzy of misplaced social vigilantism
took its toll in Chatterjee’s case it was the political frenzy that impacted
the Indira Gandhi assassination case. This is not to say that the assassins did
not deserve death sentence. One of the assassins, Beant Singh fired
thirty-three bullets into her body. He was killed instantly when her ITBP
security guards opened fire. A second assassin Satwant Singh fired twenty-three
bullets but was seriously injured in the crossfire with a bullet lodged in his
spine. In normal circumstances, his condition would have rendered him
ineligible for hanging. A plea to the Supreme Court to allow him to recover was
disallowed. A medical team hastily removed the bullet to ‘ready’ him for the
hanging. (Bhatnagar, Rakesh. “The
accused did not want to be defended”. DNA. October, 30,
2009 https://bit.ly/2Iw5T5c). Ram Jethmalani
pleaded in vain that the case against the third assassin, Kehar Singh was
flimsy and highly circumstantial and did not ‘prove guilt beyond all reasonable
doubt’. The President disallowed mercy petitions with utmost dispatch.
Tuesday, October 01, 2019
Playing God, Ungodly?
Monday, September 23, 2019
‘The Fourth Estate’ Not ‘The Almighty’
During
much of his current term President Donald Trump had to fight
accusations that he had had a secret covenant with the Russians, who helped him
rig the 2016 presidential election. There were three prime accusations. The
first was that a Russian organisation, ‘Internet Research Agency’ (IRA), which
influences poll outcomes through social media campaigns, was deployed to run
down his opponent Hilary Clinton and boost his election. The second was more
serious and was about a possible hacking of the computers in the Democratic
Party election offices by the Russian military intelligence agency,
GRU. Had this been proven it would have turned out to be not just Trump’s own ‘Watergate’
but far worse! The third was about ‘obstruction of justice’.
This article is not about whether or not President Trump was guilty or not of the misdemeanours he was accused of but about their treatment by the American media. The accusations levelled by Trump’s political rivals were orchestrated by internationally visible sections of the American media like ‘CNN,’ ‘The New York Times’ and ‘The Washington Post’. Times’ journalists won two Pulitzer prizes for the ‘Trump-Russia’ stories!
The US Attorney General William Barr appointed Special Counsel Robert Mueller to investigate the allegations. The report Mueller submitted in March this year did not find any substantive evidence to prove the allegations. As Byron York observed in his September 10, 2019, ‘Washington Examiner’ opinion piece
‘the conspiracy-coordination
allegation the Times had devoted itself to pursuing turned out
to be false … TheTrump-Russia hole came up dry’!
The story did not end there. Some of The New York Times’ readers and its own staff were not happy. York wrote ‘many on the Left faulted [The New York Times] for being insufficiently anti-Trump’! At this point, the issue spilled out of the media domain. It is no more about disseminating information or offering comment, however judgemental could it be. It is now more an ethical dilemma, a reflection of the media scene back home in India. Should a media organisation behave like a consumer goods supplier or restaurateur and cater to the tastes of a consumer – assuming a majority of readers the paper caters to are of a certain political leaning – or remain steadfast to an ideal of sticking to the truth? And remain neutral till the issue is settled one way or the other in the appropriate forums? The Times is now caught between the proverbial Scylla and Charybdis of its own making.
The paper conducted an internal town-hall meeting for its newsroom
staff to assuage ruffled feelings. It was necessitated because of an uproar
over a headline about the president’s alleged ‘racism’ and tweets from the
paper’s staff. ‘Slate’ published a transcript of the recording of
the Times’ town-hall meeting edited and curated by Ashley
Feinberg. The Times’ Executive Editor, Dean Baquet and Publisher A. G. Sulzberger
addressed the meeting.
A defensive Baquet seemed to find fault with the readers. He suddenly remembered that it was not the duty of the media to run political campaigns, but as an independent media hold administrations accountable! He pointed out the obvious:
“They [the paper’s critics who
want Trump’s head] sometimes want us to pretend that he was not elected
president, but he was elected president.”
What should be worrying in this episode is the apparent political conditioning of the staff. Shouldn’t newspaper employees be trained to be neutral observers and faithful reporters rather than political instruments?
Both York and Feinberg felt that Baquet’s remark that “the story changed” was significant. York wonders whether having spent a lot of time and energy on the ‘Trump-Russia’ story (and failed) the Times would spend the next two years on the “Trump-is-a-racist narrative”?
The ‘The Fourth Estate’ in the headline does not refer to Geoffrey Archer’s eponymous novel but to Edmund Burke’s laudatory reference to the press.[1]
In Irving Wallace’s brilliant thriller, ‘The Almighty’, the protagonist inherits a newspaper, a fictional rival of ‘The New York Times’. The conditional inheritance stipulates that the paper which was way behind its traditional rival should surpass its circulation for at least one day in the succeeding year. In order to retain ownership, the protagonist recruits a gang of terrorists to stage events and then scoop them as news. He sets himself up as ‘The Almighty’!
The present media might not go the whole hog to stage terror incidents to scoop stories, but they were, in the past, halfway there. The way they stoked war hysteria for George W. Bush to bomb Iraq in the second gulf war in 2003 to destroy elusive weapons of mass destruction (WMD) was near enough. Are the Times’ and The Washington Post’s anti-Trump campaigns one of a piece with their earlier war campaigns?
[1] In his 1787 speech in the British House of Commons, Edmund Burke reportedly said “There are three estates in Parliament (the Lords Spiritual, the Lords Temporal and the Commons) but in the Reporters' Gallery yonder there sits a Fourth Estate more important far than they all. It is not a figure of speech or witty saying, it is a literal fact, very momentous to us in these times.”
An earlier version of the article appeared in The Times Of India Blogs
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Is Hindu majority chimerical? Is Hindu ‘majority’ really ‘minority’?
Sunday, July 07, 2019
The myth of Nehru and the IITs!
The most sordid twist in the saga of the Hijli Shaheed Bhavan was that a part of it was converted into the “Nehru Museum of Science and Technology” in 1990. The martyrs were dumped on the wayside of history.
Friday, January 11, 2019
Hinduism (Sanātana Dharma) In Peril?
“This is the twenty-first century. We have been progressing technologically and scientifically. Globalization has erased national boundaries. Is it necessary in this day and age to harbor religious chauvinism? Does religion really matter? Let us eschew narrow-minded religiosity. What the country needs is development. Basic necessities like food, water and infrastructure facilities like roads … these should get our attention rather than religion.”
These are lofty ideals. As the poet said they are “Good sentences and well pronounced!” But they are preached only to Hindus. Or are only uttered by Hindus! There may be broadminded people in other faiths too but they remain mute. And remain faithful to their religious institutions.
How ideal would it be if everyone practiced their religion in individual or family settings without disturbing social harmony! But do we see such an atmosphere in India? The intolerance of non-Hindu religions towards Hinduism is a fact of everyday life that cannot be concealed. It is a perilous reality that the Indian polity has been ignoring.