Home Blog Page 2659

Judgement — Best Bakery case

0

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004 Year 10   No. 97, Judgement 2

 

Judgement — Expunging orders

0

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004 Year 10   No. 97, Judgement 3

Best Bakery Case: Factfile

0


 
March 1, 2002:
Two days after the Godhra carnage, a mob attacked Best Bakery in the Hanuman Tekri area of Vadodara. Hanuman Tekri is a poor, lower middle-class neighbourhood. Predominantly Hindu, very few Muslim families live here. The mob looted and burnt the bakery, killing 14 people in a period of 12 hours. The mob targeted the Muslims inside including the Sheikh family which ran the bakery. Three Hindu workers who worked at the bakery were also killed.
 

Fifty-year-old Sehrunissa Sheikh, wife of the bakery owner Nafitullah Habibullah Sheikh, eldest son of bakery owner Habibullah Sheikh and 18-year-old Zahira Sheikh, her daughter, were the key witnesses. When the occupants of the building called the police for help a police van arrived about an hour and half later. But it drove past the bakery and did nothing to stop the mob. A policeman got off the van and even incited the mob. The attack intensified after the police van left. Zahira’s sister Shabira, her mama, and 12 others including four small children of the neighbours who had taken shelter there, were burnt alive by the mob. Two of her brothers were burnt alive. Two of her other brothers were tied up and torched but survived the attack. Her chacha’s entire family was killed. Two bodies could not be found. The stomachs of the three Hindu workers were slit.
 

March 2, 2002: Zahira recorded a statement at the site of the incident and thereafter continued at the hospital where the injured had been admitted. She filed an FIR before the police on March 2, 2003 naming the accused. She also made a full statement before the chairperson of the NHRC when they visited Gujarat after the riots on March 22-21, 2003.
 

May 7, 2003: Brother of Zahira, Nafitullah, and sister Saira retract their statements in court.
 

May 17, 2003: Zahira turned hostile under pressure. The same day her mother Sherunissa and younger brother Naseebullah also depose and also deny facts. She allegedly received threats from various sources including a local scrap dealer, Lal Mohammed, who was also a witness in the case and later retracted his statement. On the day of Zahira’s court appearance the local BJP MLA Madhu Shrivastava was present; he accompanied her to court. This is perceived as a tactic of intimidation.
 

June 27, 2003: Additional sessions judge HU Mahida of the Vadodara fast track court acquitted all the 21 accused in the case who were named by key witness Zahira Sheikh in her statements before the police, the NHRC and the Concerned Citizens Tribunal (Crimes Against Humanity, 2002).
 

July 7, 2003: CJP holds a press conference for Zahira in Mumbai. About a month-and-a-half after she turned hostile in court, Zahira and her family approached the Citizen’s for Justice and Peace, a citizens’ group committed to the legal battle for justice for victims of mass crimes.
 

July 11, 2003: Zahira gave a statement on oath before a full bench of the NHRC in the presence of Teesta Setalvad, secretary, CJP, about how she was forced to retract her statements in court. She named those who had threatened her and her family to pressure her to retract her statement.
 

August 1, 2003: The National Human Rights Commission filed a Special Leave Petition (SLP) under Article 136 of the Constitution of India in the Supreme Court. The NHRC requested the SC to set aside the judgement of the trial court and for further investigation of the case by an independent agency. Also a re-trial of the case in a court located outside the state of Gujarat.
 

August 7, 2003: A day before the Supreme Court was to hear the NHRC’S petition, the Gujarat state government (prodded by the Supreme Court), filed an appeal before the Gujarat high court challenging the acquittal of the accused. The appeal did not ask for re-trial.
 

August 8, 2003: Zahira Sheikh and the Citizens for Justice and Peace also file an SLP accompanied by affidavits of key witnesses recording the facts that are listed along with the NHRC’s SLP.
 

October 9, 2003: During the hearing on October 9, the SC appointed senior counsel and former solicitor general of India, Harish Salve, as amicus curae to assist the court on the points that had arisen in the case.
 

October 17, 2003: Two affidavits were filed by Teesta Setalvad of Citizens for Justice and Peace before the Supreme Court. These pointed out the need for re-trial and for shifting the trial outside the state. Senior counsel Shanti Bhushan appeared on behalf of the CJP. The astounding facts about riot-stricken Gujarat contained in the affidavits made Harish Salve point these out to the Court.
 

November 21, 2003: Supreme Court stays all pending major trials including Godhra.
 

December 26, 2003: The appeal by the Gujarat government challenging the acquittal of the accused by the trial court was dismissed by the Gujarat high court.
 

January 12, 2004: The detailed reasoning of the judges was contained in a 90-page judgement justifying the acquittal. The bench comprising of Justice BJ Sethna and Justice JR Vora observed that a re-trial could not be ordered because the prosecution had failed to produce proper evidence. It pointed out that deputy commissioner of police and investigating officers had failed to discharge their duties since they did not record key witness Zahira’s FIR at the place of incident. Referring to the submission by advocate general SN Sehlat that most witnesses turned hostile under threat, the bench observed that "there may be more than one reason for the witnesses resiling from their so-called statements made before the police and that there is nothing to show that the witnesses ever made the so-called statements."
 

Moreover, the judges also passed specific remarks against Teesta Setalvad for carrying out a parallel investigation.
 

March 23-24, 2004: Arguments on Special Leave Petition in an appeal against the high court order filed by witness and Citizens for Justice and Peace.
 

April 12, 2004: Supreme Court Division bench, comprising of Justice Doraiswamy Raju & Justice Arijit Pasayat, orders re-trial of the Best Bakery case outside Gujarat, in Maharashtra. Remarks against Teesta Setalvad passed by Gujarat high court are directed to be expunged.

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004  Year 10   No. 97, Judgement 4

CBI chargesheet: Bilkis Rasool case

0

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004 Year 10   No. 97, CBI Chargesheet
 

Judgement: Praveen Togadia (Hate speech) case

0

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004  Year 10   No. 97, Judgement, Pravind Togadia

Citizens for Justice and Peace

0

Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP) was formed on April 1, 2002. It is registered as a Society under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 and as a Trust under the Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950.

Donations to CJP are exempt under section 80(G) of the Income Tax Act.

 

The objects of CJP include:

l To check threats to Indian democracy and the Rule of Law, whether by governments or political parties or other organisations, groups or individuals.

 

l To combat all kinds of bigotry and intolerance which create inter-religious strife and differences among people.

 

l To make legal interventions in the Courts of Law through Public Interest Petitions or otherwise, to prosecute all those guilty of killing or maiming innocent citizens; and to assist others petitioning before the courts for the redressal of grievances.

 

l To set up or assist in setting up any lawyer/team of lawyers to effectively intervene in government appointed commissions of inquiry probing the causes of communal conflict or to identify the role of different agencies, in particular, government, police, political parties, leaders, non-party organisations, the media, and the like, in prevention or promotion of violence.

 

Board of Directors

The affairs of CJP are managed by a Board of Directors. The present members of the Board:

Alyque Padamsee (Communications/Advertising)

Anil Dharkar (Columnist)

Cyrus Guzder (Chairman, Airfreight)

Gulam Mohammed (Businessman, philanthropist)

Nandan Maluste (Finance, Kotak Mahindra)

IM Kadri (Senior architect)

Javed Akhtar (Poet, lyricist)

Javed Anand (Communalism Combat)

Teesta Setalvad (KHOJ, Communalism Combat)

Titoo Ahluwalia (ORG-Marg)

Vijay Tendulkar (Playwright)

Arvind Krishnaswamy (DGM, Bharat Petroleum)

 

Office bearers

President: Vijay Tendulkar

Vice-president: Iftikhar M Kadri

Secretary: Teesta Setalvad

Treasurer: Arvind Krishnaswamy

 

Report of Activities (April 2002-April 2004):

 

1. Relief and Rehabilitation: Compared to most NGOs engaged in Relief and Rehabilitation work after the Gujarat violence, CJP’s own contribution can be said to be quite modest: approximately Rs. 11 lakh so far . But we are happy that because we dragged the Narendra Modi Government to the Gujarat high court on this issue, the Gujarat government was compelled, as a result of the court orders, to spend at least an additional Rs. 10 crore on providing for food and other supplies to relief camps, something that the Modi government was adamant it would not do.

 

2. Concerned Citizens Tribunal: CJP took the initiative in setting up a citizens’ tribunal headed by Justice VR Krishna Iyer, (retd., Supreme Court) and two other retired judges – one each of the Supreme Court and high court — to conduct an independent probe into the violence in Godhra and the rest of Gujarat. Their 3-volume report, Crime Against Humanity, continues to be the most potent document till date on the Gujarat violence nationally and internationally. On its release from Ahmedabad, Delhi, Mumbai and Hyderabad, the findings and recommendations of the tribunal received extensive print and electronic media coverage.

 

3. Legal Action:

Best Bakery case: If the question of justice and peace in the context of the horrors of Gujarat has been brought centre-stage in the last three months, (though several legal initiatives were taken earlier), it has been due to the intervention of the Supreme Court of India in the Best Bakery case. For this, CJP can justly claim most of the credit.

It was on the CJP’s assurance of support that Zahira Sheikh and her family moved to Mumbai (CJP has since been looking after all their financial and security needs) and in early July 2003, she told a packed press conference why they were forced to lie before the court earlier and why they wanted a re-trial of the Best Bakery case outside Gujarat. The CJP secretary personally escorted Zahira Sheikh to Delhi for a full-bench hearing before the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). It was thereafter that the NHRC decided on its rare step of filing an appeal in the Supreme Court endorsing Zahira’s plea for a re-trial outside Gujarat.

 

Besides the NHRC, CJP and Zahira also filed a separate appeal in the SC, which has now been clubbed together with the NHRC petition. CJP’s two earlier petitions pending in the SC, on hate speech and need for transfer of investigation of the massacres to an independent agency are also to be heard now. The CJP has the moral and physical responsibility of taking care of the Sheikh family.

 

Godhra Families come to CJP: On Dussera Day (October 5, 2003), 14 members from four Hindu families, each of whom had lost a woman from their family in the fire that consumed coach S-6 of the Sabarmati Express in Godhra last year, addressed a press conference in Mumbai. They, too, sought the CJP’s help in their struggle for justice, as they felt totally cheated and betrayed by the very people in Gujarat who claim to be their protectors and who have raised huge amounts of money in their name. These Hindu families have also filed an impleadment application before the SC pleading that the Godhra case too must be heard outside Gujarat. Schooling and other needs of these families are also being borne by the CJP.

 

Gulberg Society, Chamanpura: This was one of the worst carnages where the former member of parliament, Ehsan Jaffri was brutally killed along with many others. CJP has been handling the criminal trial from the very start and it is because of CJP’s consistent support that witnesses have not been cowed down, intimidated and broken down despite numerous attempts.

 

The public prosecutor appointed for this trial by the Gujarat government was a man who had himself been charge-sheeted for burning alive nine Muslims in the mid-‘80s! We are pressing for a transfer of this case outside Gujarat, too.

 

Other Criminal Trials: Due to CJP’s sheer doggedness, tenacity and constant communication with and support to the victims in their struggle for justice, many eye-witnesses in cases that have either ruinously culminated in Best Bakery-type acquittals, or where trials have been stayed by the Supreme Court, have now approached the CJP for legal assistance. These include witnesses to the worst massacres during the Gujarat genocide: Naroda Patiya, Kidiad, Pandharwada.

Compensation claim: In response to CJP’s Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Gujarat high court, the court has asked the Gujarat government to give a full and proper account of the Rs. 150 crore that was promised from the PM’s fund for the relief of Gujarat’s victims of violence. The chief secretary of Gujarat and three other secretaries of the Gujarat government have already held three meetings with the CJP secretary (Teesta Setalvad) following the court’s direction. Over the past month, a team of volunteers has been verifying our claims versus the district collector’s records.

 

Transfer Petition(s) Supreme Court: Following CJP’s initiative in the Best Bakery case and Zahira Sheikh’s appearance before the NHRC, the NHRC also filed a Transfer Petition in the SC praying for a transfer of 14 Major Carnage Trials out of Gujarat. This was in keeping with the NHRC’s findings in its path-breaking report released in 2002.

 

The CJP has also impleaded itself in this Transfer Petition and filed, directly in the SC, affidavits of major complainants, eye-witnesses that reveal starkly the state of subverted investigation and trials in Gujarat. The CJP has also filed along with Hindu victims of the S-6 coach burning and the relatives of illegal accused, a transfer petition in the Godhra matter.

 

Hate Speech and Hate Writing: The CJP has filed a petition under section 153a and 153 b of the IPC against the hate filled speeches of Gujarat CM, Mr. Narendra Modi and VHP president. Mr. Ashok Singhal. (The former had stated in August 2002, "Relief Camps are Baby Making Factories;" and Singhal said, "Gujarat was a successful experiment… I am proud that entire villages were purged of Islam."

 

Petition against Pandey’s appointment to CBI: Even as several matters are pending in the SC, praying for independent investigations by the CBI into the Gujarat massacres, the Central Government has appointed none other that PC Pandey, former Ahmedabad police commissioner, to the post of additional director, CBI. Pandey has been seriously indicted for dereliction of duty and failure to protect lives and property in Ahmedabad, post-Godhra.

 

Legal Support/Legal Aid: The CJP is also supporting a team of local lawyers in Gujarat in an effort to make sure that information is collected in time for the SC and HC cases and also to ensure that none of the local legal processes within Gujarat are subverted.

 

CJP Internships: Due to the respect that the CJP has earned for its work, international students of law and human rights have offered themselves for 8-week internships in Mumbai and Gujarat. A student of the New York Law School is working with the secretary, CJP on a research paper on the ‘Role of the public prosecutor in India’ and a memo on Witness Protection. All this will feed back into the litigation process that the CJP is spearheading in the SC.

 

Team of Lawyers: CJP is extremely grateful to the highly accomplished team of lawyers who have handled different cases for CJP pro bono (free of cost):

 

Gujarat high court:

Aspi Chinoi – Relief Camp case, 2002, Gujarat high court.

Mahesh Jethmalani – POTA case, Gujarat special court.

 

Supreme Court:

Ram Jethmalani – Advice to file SLP in Best Bakery case and for transfer

of 4 trials out of Gujarat.

Kapil Sibal – Appeal in Best Bakery acquittal case.

Shanti Bhushan – Best Bakery case.

Anil Divan – CBI Inquiry plus Godhra transfer petition.

 

 

CJP’s Achievements on the Legal Front so far:

 

Punish the guilty: Supreme Court order directing a reinvestigation and re-trial of the Best Bakery massacre case outside Maharashtra.

 

State’s duty to provide relief to victims of carnage: Gujarat high court judgements, directing the Gujarat government to provide adequate relief, medical care and sanitary facilities to the relief camps; also directing the government not to close the camps till the victims felt secure enough to leave the camps. Thanks to these judgements, the Narendra Modi government was forced to spend at least Rs. 10 crore more on the relief camps than it would have liked to do.

Archived from Communalism Combat, April-May 2004 Year 10   No. 97, Citizens for Justice and Peace