Independent inquiry
into Muzaffarnagar Riots
By
Prof Mohan Rao, JNU, Prof Ish Mishra, DU,
Ms Pragya Singh, Journalist Outlook & Dr
Vikas Bajpai, PhD scholar, JNU
|
Press Statement on the Report Date: December 30, 2013
An inquiry into the communal
riots that took place in Muzaffarnagar past September was conducted by a team
of independent academics and a journalist from Delhi. The inquiry is based on
the findings that were made by the team during its visit to Muzaffarnagar
district on the 9th and the 10th of November and again on
the 27th November.
The team also drew upon the
assistance of Dr. Subhash Tyagi, Professor of Geography, Machra College, Meerut
and Praveen Raj Tyagi, Principal Greenland Public School, Duhai, Ghaziabad..
OBJECTIVES OF OUR ENQUIRY:
1.
To investigate the role of state agencies in
either preventing or containing violence, in taking appropriate punitive
actions against the guilty and also to investigate some incidents of communal
violence.
2.
To investigate the role of the government in
providing relief and rehabilitating the displaced and the progress made in
displaced people going back to their villages and homes.
3.
To understand economic, social and political
reasons that led to the recent spate of communal violence in this area of
Western Uttar Pradesh.
SALIENT FINDINGS:
Role of the agencies of the State
Indian State is a
Constitutionally mandated ‘Secular’ State
and the Indian ruling classes as represented through its different political
parties claim to adhere to the principles of ‘Secularism’ in State policy. This makes it incumbent upon the
agencies of the State to be the foremost custodians of secular values in our
society. However, the events related to the communal incidents in
Muzaffarnagar, its aftermath and the continuing tragedy of the riot affected
families / persons prove to be the undoing of the Indian State in this regard.
This undoing is not the result of the proverbial ‘inadvertent administrative
lapses’ but an outcome of deliberate and calculated decisions at different
levels as is evident from the following:
The affidavits riots victims were
made to sign for availing monetary compensation
Even before it had first appeared
in the press, our team had found that the riot affected Muslim families in the
different relief camps were being made to sign an affidavit (copy attached as
annexure) that enforced following conditions on the signatories:
Ø
That myself and members of my family have come
leaving our village and home being terrorized due to violent incidents in ………
village and we will not now return to our
original village and home under any
circumstances.
Ø
That the lumpsum financial help being given for
my family by the government will only be used by me to rehabilitate my family.
By this money I will live with my family voluntarily arranging for residence at
appropriate place elsewhere.
Ø
That in the condition of receiving lumpsum
financial help amount, myself or members of my family will not demand compensation relating to any damage to any immovable
property in my village or elsewhere.
The State thus sought
to impose a demographic change in the riot affect villages by trying to
permanently cleanse them of the Muslim population. The monetary relief being
disbursed was not to rebuild the damaged property or means of livelihood, but
served as a tool to enforce this demographic change. This move has served to
reinforce the terror following the communal violence in the minds of affected
families / persons besides inflicting a lasting damage upon the composite
culture of the people of the area and possibilities of a gradual healing. The
displaced families are now being ghettoized in the Muslim dominated towns and
localities and shall continue to serve as permanent markers of the communal
divide opened by these riots. The benefit of this divide for the powers that be
notwithstanding, the divide itself has been consciously deepened by the state.
It is noteworthy that
when these aspects were pointed out by the team members to the district
administration, its officials denied that the government was preventing people
from going back to the villages and that the government had issued an order
stating that those who wanted to return to their villages were free to do so.
But on demanding that a copy of the order be provided, none could be found.
Nepotism, complicity and inaction
of the police in incidents of violence
The crisis of
credibility of the law and order machinery in Muzaffarnagar is best reflected
in the statement of senior police officials of the district that – “both the
Jats and the Muslims are complaining against us, so we must have done something
good.” What is that ‘something good’ they themselves are unable to say. Police itself
is at pain to readily enumerate pro-active and positive actions taken by it
against the wrong doers to reclaim its credibility, especially in the eyes of
the affected families of the minority community who continue to live in fear. Establishing
this credibility becomes all the more difficult when in a region where Muslim
population is around 27 percent, as per senior police official of the district
the representation of Muslims in police force is less than 3 percent. The
officer however maintained that “this did not matter for a policeman is a
policeman and religion was not a factor in discharge of his duties.”
The residents at the
camps were categorical in saying that they did not want to go back to their
villages as their tormentors were still roaming free and that the government
had done little that would have them repose their faith in the law and order
machinery. The frequent transfers of the senior police officials in the
district have not helped the matters either. Mr. Hari Narain Singh whom we
talked to is the 5th SSP to have been posted in the district in this
year.
In Qutba village where
from single largest number of Muslim killings has been reported in the district
(a total of 8 Muslim deaths) there was actually a picket of PAC (provincial
armed police) posted in the village at the time when riots broke out. These
policemen were having tea in the Pradhan’s house when mobs started rampaging
Muslim households. The two Muslim men who rushed to them to seek their help
were told to have been locked up by these policemen in the Pradhan’s house.
The second incident of
killings that took place while the police were in the vicinity was at the
Mohammepur Raisingh village on October 30 where three Muslim youth from the
neighboring Hussainpur village were killed by the Jats even as there was a
picket of the state police posted in the village. The Hussainpur villagers on
learning of the abduction of youth from their village persistently tried to
contact the SHO of Bhaura Kalan police station to seek his immediate
intervention, but their repeated calls went unanswered.
Upon conversation with
the Pradhan of Hussainpur village it is learnt that despite the best efforts of
the villagers many of those accused by name in the killings have still not been
arrested and are roaming free in Mohammedpur Raisingh. He further alleged that
the police have informally declared rates (for bribe) to weaken the cases
against those accused of murders or even to let them go scot free.
Without prejudice to the larger
communal design behind the Muzaffarnagar riots, the team is of considered
opinion that the sequence and the circumstances of the incidents of communal
violence in Muzaffarnagar show that had the police and the district
administration acted with alacrity and a fair sense of judgment towards the
sentiments of the people of the area in the immediate aftermath of the claimed
incidence of eve teasing and related murders in Kawal village, the subsequent
turn of events could have been entirely avoided.
Outsourcing of relief to the Muslim communal organizations by the State
Nothing could have been
better for the cause of secularism in India that the State was seen upon by the
riot affected Muslim families / persons as a dependable, sincere and caring source
of succor in their hour of grief and a guarantor of the safety of their lives
and property. The post rioting management of relief has been a concerted
undoing of this ideal.
On being quizzed as to
why no state agency has a visible presence at the relief camps and why all
relief is being disbursed by the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Madarsa intezamia
committees, the district administration told that this was in accordance with
the policy of the state government. The Shiv Pal Yadav committee set up by the state
government in the immediate aftermath of the riots had recommended that all
relief be provided to the riot affected families through community
organizations; ostensibly because ‘they are closer to the people.’ It need be
mentioned here that Jamaat was the ‘community organization’ with the most
dominant and visible presence all over the relief camps.
Whatever be the wisdom
of such a judgment of the state government, communal community organizations,
by their very nature, cannot be expected to be credible foot soldiers for
Secularism ideals. The impact of this was evident in the relief camps. Apart
from the fact that they anticipated little security of their lives upon their
return to their villages, the people also said that they would prefer to live “amidst
the security of their own people.”
Credit need be given to
the different reports before which have graphically highlighted the pitiable
conditions at the camps. We would only reiterate here that the state government
has failed to bestow even the least courtesies like arranging essential medical
or civil amenities such as safe drinking water or functioning toilets for the
people in the camps. Even though the relief camps for displaced Muslims have
attracted among the highest and the mightiest VIPs of the country, this has
done little to improve their living conditions.
Good or bad, whatever
little help is available to the people is being arranged by the local intezamia
committees under the guidance of the Jamaat functionaries. These committees
also seem to be tightly controlling what the people at the camps said of the
arrangements at the camps. At the Bassi Kalan camp when the residents tried to
complain of their neglect by the government, certain members of the managing
committee tried to stop them from saying so. Likewise at camp no 1 at Shahpur a
local Maulvi expressed his displeasure when the residents complained of the
conditions at the camp.
A close confidant of
ours asked the leaders of the Jamaat as to why they were not opposing the
affidavits that displaced Muslim families were being made to sign. To this the
reply was that there was nothing to worry about this and that all of them will
finally be allowed to return to their villages. The Jamaat further claimed
credit for getting the displaced families a handsome relief package from the
government. The silence of the Jamaat over the recent claims of the Samajwadi
Party leadership regarding the camps and the Muslim refugees being branded as
agents of the Congress and the BJP is equally deafening.
Meanwhile, the Jamaat
seems to have had two ways inflow of funds – by way of relief funds from the
government routed through it as also from the families living in the camps who
received the Rs 5 lakh government compensation. We were told by families in the
relief camps that up to Rs 20,000 had been taken from them by members of the
intezamia committees for constructing alternative accommodation.
It cannot be lost upon
any astute observer that the Samajwadi Party government of the State will now
bank on the certifications of the mullahs of the Jamaat to clean up its
abominable record of a number of communal riots / disturbances in the state in
a little over a year of its rule.
As of date the official
stand of the local administration is that there are no refugees in any relief
camp and no government aid is being disbursed in any camp. The shameless
politicking that is taking place over this is very much in the public eye.
We may however
emphasize that it is not an inadvertent lapse that a few months back home
secretary of UP issued a letter calling for a meeting to discuss the
construction of Ram temple at Ayodhya and once again another home secretary of
the state under the same government has dismissed the plight of the riot
affected people by saying that ‘people do not die of cold.’ Such acts are a
comment on the secular credentials of the state machinery.
The communal campaign and the Muzaffarnagar violence
The communal violence in
Muzaffarnagar cannot but be seen in the context of the series of incidents of
communal violence in different parts of the country beginning from Kishthwar (J
& K), Masoori and Meerut in UP, Indore and Harda in MP, Bettiah and Nawada
in Bihar and Rangpur in Cachar district of Assam. In UP there seemed to have
been a sustained campaign at communalization ever since Amit Shah took over the
reins of BJP in the state. Besides campaigns like ‘chaurasi kos parikrama’ in
Ayodhya, there was a mix of new innovations like the ‘love jihad’ clearly
directed against the minorities. The events are pathognomonic of the tactics of
the recognized Hindu communal forces represented by the Sangh Parivar. It would
be evident even to a common man on the street that the approaching Lok Sabha elections
of 2014 provide are the leitmotif of this campaign.
However, equally abominable is
the complicity of the forces that are eulogized as ‘secular’ in facilitating
the progress of this communal campaign. The track record of the Akhilesh Yadav
led Samajwadi Party in dealing with communal forces in the state, its own
attitude towards the common Muslims and history of hob-knobbing with Muslim
communal forces is a case in the point.
The overwhelming weight of
evidence points towards the fact that Muslims have been the worst sufferers of
the communal orgy that swept Muzaffarnagar during the months of September and
October 2013 in terms of loss to life and property and displacement of people
from their homes and villages. As per the information available from the SSP
(Senior Superintendent Police’s) office a total of 52 people died in the
communal disturbances of which 37 were Muslims and 15 were Hindus (though we
could not get the formal break-up of the Hindu deaths, but there are strong
reasons to believe that these were almost exclusively of the Jats). As per
unofficial sources as many as 100,000 Muslims had been displaced from their
homes while by the time of our visit the government acknowledged that 50,955
persons had been displaced who were accommodated in 11 relief camps. A total of
540 FIRs have been registered in riot-related incidents, in which around 6000
people have been named.
There is a very important
distinction in the manner in which deaths occurred among the Muslims and the
Jats. Almost all the Jats who were killed were those who had participated in
the Mahapanchayat that took place at Nangla Mandaur village on September 7. The
team found ample accounts of the Jats, in tractor trollies from different
villages that went to take part in the Mahapanchayat, raising provocative
slogans as they passed by Muslim villages, localities and madarsas.
Insinuations like dogs being dressed in burqa and being beaten with slippers
were amply on display. Slogans like – “Musalmano ke do sthan – Pakistan ya kabristan’
were also raised. This was not only narrated by the Muslims we talked to but
even some of the belligerant Jats we talked to admitted that “these youth have
been taken in by the charisma of Modi and they raised slogans in his support”
while going for the mahapanchayat.
The Jats who died were killed in
reaction to this deliberate provocation. Most of these deaths took place on the
evening of September 7 in attacks on Jat trollies as they returned from the
Mahapanchayat or were of those Jats who got injured in these attacks and died
later in the hospitals. The only incident of a seemingly planned attack on Jats
took place in Pur Baliyan village on September 7 in which some Mulle Jats
wanted to attack the trolley of Jats from Sohram village as it returned from
the Mahapanchayat. However, in the melee of the violence Jats from Kakda
village also got killed. It is noteworthy that none of the Jat families from
Pur Baliyan village itself were attacked by Muslims.
In comparison to this the attacks
and deaths of Muslims have taken place as part of a sustained campaign in
different villages and those who got killed were innocent Muslim women,
children and youth of the lower classes who had no role in attacks on Jats. The
deaths of Muslims and their forced displacement from the villages appears to
have been the handiwork of organized mobs. The handwork of the larger communal
design and organization in this was evident in the well-rehearsed and exactly
similar arguments which the Jats from different villages forwarded to
rationalize the killings and the displacement of the Muslims. As indeed one Jat
teacher in Kakda village, who was not in the least sympathetic to Muslims,
described the communal violence in the region as – “Yeh hai Amit Shah ka
jadoo.” The Qutba village which witnessed the largest number of Muslim deaths
had been witness to a panchayat that was attended by the BJP president Mr
Rajnath Singh about a year ago. This is a pointer to the forces that have been
at work in the area.
The Jats in vilalges like Kakda
and Mohammedpur Raisingh put forth ludicrous arguments such as – “the Muslims
were willing to come back to their villages, but have deliberately stuck to the
relief camps ever since the government announced the 5 lakh relief package” and
that they “themselves destroyed their property to claim inflated relief.” The
well recognized communal arguments propagated by the Hindu communal forces
against Muslims – “they have large families and do not believe in family
planning”; “they are anti-national” and that “they will create a Kashmir like
situation here as well” – were amply heard in the villages from the Jats.
Is it Jat versus Muslims or Hindus
versus Muslims?
It has been reported that lower
caste Hindus also participated in attacks on Muslims along with the Jats in
different villages. However, the Muslims whom we interviewed in the relief
camps felt that wherever the lower caste Hindus acted against them it was under
the pressure of the Jats as the Jats were the dominant Hindu caste in the area
and the lower caste Hindus had little option but to follow the diktat of the
Jats. This is also a pointer in the direction that the communalization process
in the area is linked to the larger power dynamics of the area. We did not have
the time during our visit to sufficiently study this aspect of the communal
phenomenon in the region.
On visiting the villages, the
distinct caste hierarchies were observed in the structure of the villages, and
also in terms of the involvement of different castes in the decision making
processes. For example in the 35 biradari panchayat that was convened in
Mohammadpur Raisingh on the November 10, representatives of all the upper
castes were invited but none from the lower castes.
It is however noteworthy that no communal violence has been reported
from any of the Muslim dominated villages in the district. Simultaneously,
there were Jat dominated villages where the Jats took up the responsibility of
protecting their Muslim brethren. Some of such villages were Kheda Gani, Garhi Novabad, Garhi Jaitpur
and Kurawa.
THE WAY FORWARD
In our opinion the biggest
finding of our investigation into the communal riots at Muzaffarnagar is that
despite the constitutional and formal averments of the ‘secular’ character of
the Indian state, the de facto reality remains that the state machinery has
acted in a highly communal manner which undermines India’s secular credentials
and drives the communal cleavages deeper. Even as the communal poison being
spread by the Hindutva forces need be countered with full force by Indian
people, the role played by the Samajwadi Party government in UP in connivance
with the Muslim communal forces during the entire phase and its latest act of
forcibly evicting the riot displaced families from relief camps instead of
acknowledging and fulfilling its responsibilities towards then with humility
brings into question the advisability of forming alliances with such parties to
counter communalism. The stark reality is that despite the fact that Muslims
constitute a much larger share of UP’s population as compared to Yadav’s, the
propensity of the Yadavization of administrative structure is much stronger
while the Muslims can at best expect their lives to be spared in the name of
secularism. The reality of India’s secularism, it seems, sways between ‘Hindu
Rule’ of the so called secular parties of the ruling classes and the ‘Hindu
Rashtra’ of the saffron brigade.
To uphold secularism in India,
the first thing to realize is that – ‘fighting communalism is not merely an
electoral issue.’ The communal forces can be defeated only by ground struggles
built by an alliance of the minorities, the working masses, the dalits, the
tribals, other oppressed castes and nationalities and progressive sections of
the intelligentsia. In this regard the example held out by the people of Hussainpur, Kheda Gani, Garhi Novabad, Garhi Jaitpur, Kurawa and other such villages
we could not know of, howsoever
under-reported, is a ray of hope.
OUR DEMANDS
The following demands acquire top
most priority in our opinion under the prevailing circumstances:
1.
All the accused named in the FIRs should be
arrested.
2.
Decommunalize the state apparatus.
3.
Restore all villagers back to their homes.
4.
Scrap the
affidavit which was taken against five lakh compensation amount.
बहुत लम्बा है पढ़ा नही !
ReplyDeleteफुर्सत नें पढ़िएगा
ReplyDeleteIf its honest report....I must appreciate the work. Very pathetic situation of our country. Thanks for this effort.
ReplyDeleteWe have presented only what we observed and have refrained from our own analysis. Its alarming situation, if we do not awake at earliest this kind of communal ghettoization will pervade. Hindu & Muslim fundamentalism/communalism are twins and are in tacit alliance against composite culture, secularism and democracy. Both are modern ideologies born from the womb of capitalism and hold identical views on al the substantial socio-economic issues.
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