http://www.firstpost.com/politics/teesta-setalvad-is-being-framed-by-gujarat-govt-but-wheres-the-outrage-2097117.html
Teesta Setalvad is being framed by Gujarat govt; but where’s the outrage?
Teesta Setalvad is being framed by Gujarat govt; but where’s the outrage?
The Gujarat Police's overt enthusiasm to arrest Teesta Setalvad
and her husband Javed Anand no sooner than the state high court rejected their
plea for anticipatory bail in a curious "embezzlement" case didn't
raise any eyebrows, but justified the perception that the BJP government was on
a hot pursuit of the activist. The BJP leaders and their proxies found nothing
extraordinary in the action of Gujarat Police, which landed up at the doorstep
of Setalvad in Mumbai in no time, because, according to them, the police was at
liberty to arrest the accused when the courts refuse anticipatory bail. Some
would even say that the police was duty-bound to pursue the case.
But what was unsaid was the deviousness in the police's
insistence of custodial interrogation of the couple for alleged diversion of
funds collected by her NGO to convert Gulbarg Society in Ahmedabad, where 69
people were killed in the 2002 riots, into a museum. The charge was that the
couple had transferred Rs 14.2 lakhs from the NGO's account to clear their
credit card bills and had transferred large sums of money to their personal
accounts. The police said that the expenses included payments for wine and
groceries.
Setalvad had clarified that credit card expenses that the NGO
paid for were not personal, but official such as travel. It’s not unusual for
people to use personal credit card for official purposes and then get the
official expenses reimbursed. But by conflating the personal (wine, groceries,
books etc.) and official, the police tried to besmirch their reputation and
make out a case. Similarly, additional money used from the account was for
salaries and legal expenses.
The police case was based on a complaint by 12 members of the
Gulbarg Housing Society, which curiously refused to take note of the submission
by the secretary and chairman of the Society that the case was false. The
latter had also informed the police that the complainants had misused office
stationery.
That despite an official clarification from the Gulbarg Society,
the police went ahead with the case looked clearly motivated. And now their
overzealousness in seeking custodial interrogation of the couple nails their
intent.
One cannot clearly miss the police targeting Setalvad, but what
makes one more worried about their motive is their track record in foisting
spurious cases against her. In 2012, the Supreme Court came down heavily on the state for initiating a probe for "illegal
exhumation" of the 2002 riot victims. "This is a hundred percent
spurious case to victimise the petitioner (Setalvad)," said the court.
"This type of case does no credit to the state of Gujarat in any
way," it further said.
A year later, the police came up with the embezzlement case,
despite the official representatives of the Gulbarg Society affirming that they
had no complaint, and wanted to arrest Setalvad.
The police's dogged pursuit brings us to the question of who
Setalvad is. She is an exceptional character in India’s human rights campaigns
- she is the principal reason for getting justice, although partial, to the
victims of the 2002 communal riots in Gujarat. For the first time in India, 117
perpetrators of communal violence, including a minister in the then Modi state
cabinet, had been convicted. Had it not been for her and other rights
activists, the victims would been gagged to submission. She is also the biggest
obstacle to Modi’s image management efforts.
Obviously, Setalvad is a marked person because she is refusing
to give up, along with Zakia Jafri, the complainant in the Gulbarg Society
massacre case, against the Gujarat state government and the then chief minister Narendra Modi although a Special Investigation Team had
found no prosecutable evidence against him. Setalvad and her supporters, point
to the dissenting notes by the Supreme Court appointed amicus curiae Raju
Ramachandran, who had said that the evidence against Modi was significant.
Setalvad may be particularly unsparing of Modi, as some allege,
but that doesn’t allow for continuous police harassment. The victimisation of
Setalvad is too evident to ignore. And it hadn’t started yesterday. In 2005,
she was accused of pressuring Zaheera Sheikh in the Best Bakery Case to given
evidence against the government. The SC had later absolved Setalvad and sent
Zaheera Sheikh to jail for a year. "This is a classic example of a case
where evidence were tampered with and witnesses won over," the court had
then said.
This record of victimisation against Setalvad for the simple
reason that she is standing up for her fellow citizens’ battle for justice is a
warning to human rights activists and a reminder of the abominable misuse of
power by the state.
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