The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information concerning a concocted criminal case registered against a journalist in India, Mr. Rahul Singh, for reporting a mass grave in Panderwada village within Panchmahal district of Gujarat. In December 2005, Rahul came to know about the mass grave in Panderwada from the local human rights activists. The mass grave reportedly had the remains of 21 victims of the 2002 Gujarat genocide. Rahul reported the news about the exhumation of human remains by the victims' family members through Sahara, a TV news channel in December 2005.
The mass grave exposed the criminal nexus between the state administration led by the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP), the state police and other fundamentalist Hindu political groups operating in India, particularly the persons in the state administration who colluded with the Hindu fundamentalists to carryout the genocide. Eight years later, the Gujarat State Police have now registered a criminal case against Rahul accusing him that he has aided the tampering of evidence in a criminal case and has broadcast reports that could have caused communal hatred. Mr. J. K. Bhat, who was the Superintendent of Police (SP) of Panchmahal district when 21 bodies were buried in the mass grave in an alleged attempt to hide the evidence of genocide, is now the Inspector General of Police stationed at Vadodhara who is investigating the case registered against Rahul and five other accused persons, a background that seriously challenges the state police's motives of accusing Rahul of a crime that he has not committed. Rahul, after leaving Sahara is now working with Headlines Today in New Delhi.
Rahul's life is at risk from the corrupt Gujarat State Police, an institution that has thus far proved that their allegiance is not to serve the rule of law, but to act at the behest of a religiously fundamentalist political party and its leaders who have thus far escaped prosecution despite being exposed of having orchestrated a genocide that has claimed an estimated 1267 lives.
CASE DETAILS:
Rahul Singh is a journalist working with Headlines Today, an English TV News Channel associated with the media group, India Today. Before joining Headlines Today, Rahul was working with the Sahara TV. On 29 December, 2010, the Gujarat State Police went to Rahul's house in Bophal, Madhya Pradesh state, reportedly to serve him a court summons, issued by a court in Gujarat. The court has issued the summons to Rahul upon the request of the Gujarat State Police, since the police have made Rahul a co-accused in a crime registered against four other persons, including human rights defenders, working in Gujarat state in an alleged act of vengeance against their involvement in taking up and reporting cases of genocide and religious violence perpetuated by Hindu fundamentalist forces operating in Gujarat in collusion with the BJP led state administration, notorious for orchestrating the 2002 Gujarat genocide.
Rahul now stays in New Delhi and was not present at his home in Bophal when the police arrived. The police demanded Rahul's father, Mr. N. K. Singh, to accept the summons on behalf of Rahul, which Mr. Singh denied to comply. Then the police ordered Singh to issue a statement, which also Singh denied. Mr. Singh is the Resident Editor of the Hindustan Times. The six police officers who came in two vehicles, left from Rahul's house when other journalists in the city, coming to know about the incident, came to Rahul's house and questioned the process by which the summons was sought to be served. Rahul suspects that the purpose of the police visiting Rahul's house in such large number was for the police to arrest Rahul and take him to Gujarat state.
The police from one state to execute a court process or even to arrest a person residing within the jurisdiction of another state, as it is in this case, have to follow procedures prescribed by the law. In ordinary circumstances a court summons is served by a police officer or a court staff to the person concerned, wherein the summons will specify the time, date and the address of the court in which the person has to be present. Sections 62 and 67 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (Cr.P.C) prescribes the procedure to serve a court summons upon a person. Section 67 prescribes the process by which a summons issued by a court upon a person residing outside the jurisdiction of the summons issuing court. It appears that the local police or the court that issued the summons have not complied with this procedure and the court has handed over the summons to the police, instead of sending a request to an executing court having jurisdiction in Bophal to serve the summons upon Rahul. The number of police officers and their attitude to Rahul's father when they found that Rahul was not at home reiterates Rahul's fear that the police had ulterior motives that could have endangered his safety, or at least to arrest Rahul and taken him to Gujarat.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
In December 2005, Rahul was working with Sahara TV. He came to know about the mass grave in Panderwada village from a local human rights activist, Mr. Rais Khan, who then worked for a civil rights organisation called Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP). The family members of 21 persons, whose remains were recovered from the mass grave, were seeking the whereabouts of their missing relatives with the state administration at the time. These 21 persons were found missing after the Gujarat genocide, orchestrated by the BJP that ruled the state then and is also now holding power in Gujarat. The state administration and the local police, of which Mr. J. K. Bhat was the SP at that time, had informed the family members of the missing persons, that the state police did not have any information about their missing relatives.
It was at this time that some villagers in Panderwada came to know about the mass grave in the outskirts of their village. The villagers came to know about the mass grave when they found dogs scavenging bones and other decomposed flesh that the villagers suspected to be human remains. They reportedly informed Khan, who was at the time working for CJP assisting the victims' families of the 2002 genocide about the suspected presence of decomposed human remains in the village. Khan contacted the families who were searching for their missing relatives and also Rahul and informed them about the possibility of unearthing the mass grave.
Rahul contacted the then SP of Panchmahal district, Mr. Bhat and informed him about the suspected mass grave. The officer, in an interview that was broadcast over TV, informed Rahul that the police had no information about the grave or about the 21 persons alleged to be missing and suspected to be buried in the grave. Then, Rahul along with the camera crew went to the suspected mass grave where the family members of the missing persons were unearthing the grave. At the site, the family members unearthed human remains, with dress and other personal belongings of their missing relatives. Rahul, on behalf of the Sahara TV, recorded the incident and later broadcast the incident on TV. The incident revealed the attempt of those who were behind the Gujarat genocide to hide evidence of mass executions.
The state police and the administration were forced to respond. They cordoned the area and an official exhumation was conducted. The recovered remains were sent to the Forensic Laboratory in Hyderabad and the tests conducted revealed that the exhumed remains are that of the 21 persons that the families were claiming to be missing since the genocide. The state police soon came up with a story that the exhumed human remains were in fact buried after a post-mortem examination of the dead bodies of unidentified victims of a 'communal violence' in the state. The state police further claimed that the place from which the human remains were recovered was in fact a burial ground and not a hidden mass grave. The fact however is that the place resembles a waste dumping ground, and the bodies were piled one over the other and were buried only a few inches below the surface, that dogs were able to dig up the remains, which led to the disclosure of the mass grave.
The state police also produced post-mortem reports that they claimed to be relevant to the bodies that were recovered and identified, alleging that the bodies, before they were buried were examined by a forensic surgeon. However, the reports of the post-mortem examination of the 21 bodies, all conducted in the same facility and by the same crew, had the time of post-mortem examination recorded, in five to ten minutes intervals, suggesting that the documents were fabricated to fit the story invented by the state police and the administration, and further to justify the claim that the bodies were buried after proper procedures prescribed by the law.
In a recent development, Rais Khan, the human rights activist formerly working with CJP, fell off with its management and has started making accusations against the CJP. Based on Khan's allegations the Gujarat State Police have registered a criminal case against the office bearers of the CJP, including Khan. The state administration and the state police that faced severe criticism for participating in the 2002 Gujarat genocide is now allegedly making use of Khan's animosity to CJP to wreck vengeance against CJP and against everyone who exposed the despicable and alarming role the state government and the police played in the genocide. In that, the state police have made Rahul a co-accused in a case registered against Khan and the other office bearers of the CJP on the ground that Rahul, by entering the site of the mass grave has contaminated forensic evidence and through his TV reports has incited communal violence.
The fact however is that Rahul has only reported the discovery of a mass grave, the reaction of the family members who had lost their relatives in the genocide and their acts when they found the remains of their missing relatives, which the state administration and the police until then had refused of having any knowledge of.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
The case registered against Rahul once again reiterates the fact that the Gujarat state administration and its police is continuing their witch-hunting of everyone who voiced their concern against the government led by Mr. Narendra Modi, a senior leader of the BJP and the present Chief Minister of Gujarat, who actively participated in the 2002 Gujarat genocide. The police action of incorporating Rahul's name as the fifth co-accused in the crime registered by the Gujarat state police against four other persons including human rights defenders, exposes the conspiracy between the state police and the state administration in seeking out and punishing everyone who exposed the state administration's and the state police's role in facilitating the genocide and assisting in hiding or destroying the evidence of state participation in the horrific event.
The registering of a case against Rahul is also a threat to the free media in India. Rahul is one of the journalists who were instrumental in exposing and reporting state government's role in the genocide. The fraudulent nature of the crime registered against Rahul is exposed further by the fact that it is the same police officer, Mr. Bhat, who was once in charge of the area in which the mass grave was discovered, is now after promotion as the Inspector General of Police, investigating the crime registered against Rahul and four others.
Section 468 of the Cr.P.C prescribes a time limit for taking cognizance of offences punishable under the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC). While it is yet to be ascertained the exact provisions of the IPC or other laws under which the case is registered against Rahul, under ordinary circumstances the courts in India and the police are barred by the operation of Section 468 to even initiate a case against Rahul, should the charges alleged are under Sections 153, 153 A (1) and 297 of the IPC.
Click here for more details and to sign the appeal to withdraw the case against Rahul Singh