Delhi Riots 2020 | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 18 Sep 2025 09:34:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Delhi Riots 2020 | SabrangIndia 32 32 The Word is the World: How the Delhi riots conspiracy case ritualises silence https://sabrangindia.in/the-word-is-the-world-how-the-delhi-riots-conspiracy-case-ritualises-silence/ Thu, 18 Sep 2025 09:20:29 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=43629 After five years, the Delhi High Court was able to look the people of India in the eye and declare that the trial is “progressing at a natural pace”

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“If there is no sound

How can I break through

This heavy silence layering my mind?

Without the sound of words

How do I light the vision

Hidden these long days in my eyes?

I must speak and listen to my people

and learn my words again—

If a man loses words

What is left?” 

– Varavara Rao, ‘The Word is the World’ (Captive Imagination)

‘Political Prisoner’ is the criminal offense which most brazenly betrays the promises of a democratic state. It is not a crime of actions but of words: of thinking, speaking, reporting, questioning, demanding, dissenting, resisting. The incarceration of political prisoners strips away the spectacle of electoral politics and constitutional ornaments, exposing the State’s primal instinct: to smother the truth spoken to power, subjugate through enforced silence, and sanctify fear as the law.

On September 2, 2025, the Delhi High Court passed two orders denying bail to ten political prisoners accused in the ‘Delhi Riots Conspiracy Case.’ Umar Khalid, Sharjeel Imam, Athar Khan, Abdul Khalid Saifi, Mohd Saleem Khan, Shifa-ur-Rehman, Meeran Haider, Gulfisha Fatima, Sabad Ahmed, and Tasleem Ahmed were imprisoned in 2020 under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA). Five years later, not a single charge has been framed against them and the trial is far from beginning. The law’s silence is the verdict.

How does a democratic state produce a justice of silence? To answer that, we must unearth the making of a conspiracy: how an investigator’s opinion becomes evidence, the prosecutor’s narrative becomes statutorily irrefutable, and the court’s seal turns lie into truth. We ask what it means to be named a terrorist, expose the perversion of bail under the UAPA, and examine what allows a court to flout judicial precedent and abandon constitutional promises. Will the law emerge as a tool of the people’s justice or a farcical ceremony to justify the oppression of a proto-fascist state?

Engineering a Pogrom

On December 11, 2019, the Indian Parliament led by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), which provided an accelerated pathway to Indian citizenship for persecuted refugees of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi or Christian faith. Read alongside the country-wide implementation of the National Register of Citizens (NRC), the act entrenches a religious basis for citizenship where Indian Muslims, particularly the poor who often lack documentation to ‘prove’ their citizenship, face the prospect of statelessness. This exclusionary design directly flows from the ideology of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the parent body of the BJP, which believes that Muslims, or followers of any religion whose holy sites are located outside of India, can never be equal citizens.

The mass movement against the CAA-NRC was the first major popular challenge to the BJP since it came to power in 2014. What began as student rallies on college campuses evolved into peaceful sit-ins and road blockades (chakka jams) led by women residents, transforming ordinary neighbourhoods into vibrant sites of democratic assertion. It was the first time in the history of independent India that Muslims, under a young, diverse, and committed leadership, came out on the streets not just as a minority community but as proud citizens. It was a deeply instructive moment for young people to learn about politics, organisation, and the power of collective action. By January 2020, there were around 40 sit-ins across the country, with 10 in New Delhi, where people would stage a tent (pandal), host speeches and raise slogans against the discriminatory law. The largest of such sit-ins was in Shaheen Bagh.[1]

“The path shown by Shaheen Bagh has made our country into one big baagh (garden), and we will bring spring in this garden.” – Umar Khalid (Speech at Amravati, February 2020)

Timeline of Events

Given that the anti-CAA movement was directed at the government to repeal the law and there was no real cause for conflict between Hindus and Muslims, the BJP had to work hard to whip up public sentiment against it. In an apparent bid to polarise the public before the Delhi state elections (that were to be held on February 8, 2020), right-wing activists played up the fact that the anti-CAA protesters were blocking roads and inconveniencing daily commuters.[2]

On January 27, BJP MP Anurag Thakur, while campaigning in North West Delhi, raised the slogan “desh ke gaddaron ko,” to which the crowd roared “goli maaro sallon ko” (‘shoot down the bastards who betray the country’).

On January 28, BJP MP Parvesh Sahib Singh Verma vowed that If the BJP comes to power in Delhi, they would clear Shaheen Bagh within an hour. “Lakhs of people gather there (Shaheen Bagh)… They will enter your houses, rape your sisters and daughters, kill them,” he claimed in a televised interview.

On the same day, JNU PhD student Sharjeel Imam was arrested by the Jehanabad police and booked under multiple FIRs.

On February 11, the BJP lost the Delhi elections.

On February 20, the Supreme Court set up a mediation team headed by Senior Advocate Sanjay Hegde and Sadhna Ramachandran to hold talks with the protestors at Shaheen Bagh. This was the first attempt to reach out to those who had been sitting in protest since December 16.

However, the government continued to respond to the demands with absolute indifference with no Central Minister deigning to engage with the protesters. With the talks going nowhere, protesters targeted US President Donald Trump’s visit to India on February 24 and 25 to draw attention to themselves by blocking roads.

On February 23, senior BJP leader Kapil Mishra called for forcefully removing protestors. Speaking at Jaffrabad, North East Delhi, Mishra told his supporters, “We will be peaceful till Trump leaves. But after 3 days, if the roads are not cleared, we will not listen to the police.”


Kapil Mishra speaking at Maujpur, North East Delhi, flanked by Deputy Police Commissioner Ved Prakash Surya in riot gear

Hours later, violence erupted in North-East Delhi. The riots went on for five days, leaving 53 people dead, 38 Muslims and 15 Hindus, and 700 injured (for the sake of brevity, we will not go into detail about the violence. Fact-finding reports by the Delhi Minorities Commission (DMC) and Amnesty International India can be read here and here).

On February 25, BJP MLA Abhay Verma led a procession in East Delhi, chanting ‘Jo Hindu hit ki baat karega, wohi desh pe raj karega’ (Only the one who talks of Hindu interests will rule the country), among other provocative slogans.

Of the numerous incidents of hate speech by BJP leaders in the lead up to the riots, the aforementioned four were played in open court on February 26, at the direction of then-Justice S. Muralidhar of the Delhi High Court. The furious judge condemned the hate speeches, questioned the complicity of the police, and instructed the State to ensure the safety of riot victims. That night, Justice Muralidhar was transferred to the Punjab and Haryana High Court, and the case was handed over to a new bench.

On the same day, former municipal councillor Ishrat Jahan and United Against Hate co-founder Abdul Khalid Saifi were arrested by the Jagatpuri police.

On March 6, sub-inspector Arvind Kumar of the Delhi Crime Branch filed the chargesheet for FIR 59/2020, which claimed that the Delhi riots were the result of a “pre-planned conspiracy” by anti-CAA protestors. The accused were charged under 26 sections of the Indian Penal Code, including for murder, sedition, criminal conspiracy, and promoting communal enmity, two sections of the Arms Act, and four sections of the UAPA.

By March 24, the nationwide lockdown to curb the COVID-19 pandemic brought the movement at Shaheen Bagh and other sites to an abrupt halt.

FIR 59: Manufacturing the Narrative

Criminal procedure requires that upon receiving a complaint that prima facie constitutes a cognisable offence, the police must register an FIR. However, the DMC’s fact-finding report reveals that several complaints by Muslim victims were either not registered, delayed indefinitely, or not acted on. In some cases, the police refused to register an FIR unless the complainant omitted names of the accused. In others, victims were asked to arrive at a “compromise” with the accused and withdraw their complaints. On occasion, victims who went to file complaints were themselves arrested.

Of the chargesheets that were filed, crucial aspects of the chain of events, such as Kapil Mishra’s speech, were glaringly absent. The report observes how the investigations were “purposefully misdirected” to twist the cause of the violence: “the entire narrative has been changed to one of violence on both sides rather than a pogrom that was in fact carried out.”

From the outset, the investigation did not seek to reconstruct events to establish accountability for the violence. Instead, the chargesheets wove a narrative designed to legitimise a pre-determined story, where victims were culprits and aggressors were bystanders. This narrative was crystallised by FIR 59, the omnibus “conspiracy” case which charges the accused as “masterminds” of a “premeditated” plot to escalate road blockades into violent communal riots and “defame India” during the US President’s visit.

The charge sheet states that the riots began when “Muslims living in Chand Bagh and New and Old Mustafabad areas were mobilised… in order to precipitate a violent ‘Chakka Jaam’, which led to brutalisation intimidation and inflicting deadly injuries on police personnel and non-Muslim communities,’’ alleging that the “other community” (Hindus) only “retaliated” in self-defence.

The initial chargesheet, filed in Court on September 16, 2020, names 15 accused:

  1. Abdul Khalid Saifi
  2. Ishrat Jahan
  3. Meeran Haider
  4. Tahir Hussain
  5. Gulfisha Fatima
  6. Safoora Zargar
  7. Shafa-ur-Rahman
  8. Asif Iqbal Tanha
  9. Natasha Narwal
  10. Devangana Kalita
  11. Shadab Ahmed
  12. Salim Malik
  13. Salim Khan
  14. Athar Khan
  15. Taslim Ahmad

The Supplementary chargesheet, filed on November 22, 2020, names 3 additional accused:

  1. Umar Khalid
  2. Sharjeel Imam
  3. Faizan Khan

An essential ingredient of a criminal conspiracy is a ‘meeting of minds,’ i.e., a common intent in furtherance of an unlawful goal. To demonstrate this, the chargesheet devotes significant attention to a WhatsApp group called ‘Delhi Protest Solidarity Group’ (DPSG). Student activists are branded “hardcore, professional ideological deviants,” and their routine discussions about protest organisation presented as evidence of complicity. However, the police’s submission contradicts its own story: a message shared at 5:38 PM on February 23 reads “Pro-CAA protesters are pelting stones at the locals and anti-CAA protesters in the Maujpur area,” followed by video evidence. Subsequent messages show activists scrambling to respond to violence already underway.

The chargesheet is riddled with such selective omissions and factual absurdities. The police allege that Tahir Hussain met the “intellectual architect” Umar Khalid on January 8 and plotted communal riots to coincide with Trump’s visit – an impossible timeline, since the visit was not publicly announced until January 13. The chargesheet has since quietly dropped this claim.

The police further claim that the feminist activist group Pinjra Tod provided “a tactical female shield” to the protests, placing women at the forefront to “deter police” from taking action. This is a terribly misogynistic charge, which assumes that women can only be ornamental pawns without agency. Of the hundreds of women deposed, the chargesheet cannot provide a single statement suggesting she was procured, paid, or made “cannon fodder” at a protest site. It is a gross insult to the dadis of Shaheen Bagh, who sustained the peaceful sit-in throughout the five days of rioting.

The 17000-page chargesheet could not attribute a single act of violence, recovery of weapons, speech resulting in incitement, or call for violence to the named accused. The “principal mastermind” Umar Khalid was not even present in Delhi in the three days of the violence. Numerous speeches have quoted him paying homage to the Indian Constitution, and the values of the non-violent struggle led by Mahatma Gandhi. The investigative narrative, built on omissions, inversions, and conjecture, effectively recast democratic protest into terrorism.

Citizen or Terrorist? Designation as Condemnation 

The clandestine nature of a conspiracy made it the perfect storytelling weapon: elastic enough to sustain allegations without showing any causal connection between the accused and the crime, and wide enough to drag just about anyone within its ambit. Once a citizen is designated a “terrorist” who poses a “threat to national security,” facts, evidence, and constitutional reasoning are drowned under conspiratorial hysteria. The absurd reach of this logic is captured by the case of Faizan Khan, a mobile-seller whose crime was selling a SIM card to Jamia student Asif Tanha, which the police claim was later used to ‘plan the conspiracy and the violence.’ For selling a SIM card, Khan was charged with committing a terrorist act.

The UAPA designation was not incidental either. The initial FIR against Umar Khalid’s speeches did not even contain non-bailable offences – these were added only after the Magistrate granted bail to the first set of arrested accused. By then, more than 750 FIRs had already been registered for separate incidents of violence and property destruction[3]. However, even if the accused are acquitted or allowed bail on other charges, they continue to remain incarcerated under FIR 59.

The invocation of the UAPA enables the prosecution to sidestep ordinary bail safeguards and prolong pre-trial detention. Under the Code of Criminal Procedure, the police have 90 days to complete an investigation and file a chargesheet. The UAPA doubles this period to 180 days, allowing the police to stagger arrests over several months, endlessly revise their case, and keep the accused imprisoned while the narrative takes root.

Significantly, Section 43D(5) of the UAPA flips the maxim ‘bail is the rule, jail is the exception’ over its head. The provision states that if the Court, after perusing the case diary and the chargesheet, finds reasonable grounds for believing that the accusation is prima facie true, then the accused cannot be released on bail. Notably, at this stage, the defence can neither submit exculpatory evidence nor cross-examine the prosecution’s case.

In NIA v Zahoor Ahmad Shah Watali (2019), the Supreme Court interpreted “prima facie true” to mean that the materials or evidence in the FIR “must prevail until contradicted” and the Court is to record a finding based on “broad probabilities.” The Court held that:

  • At the stage of bail, courts cannot examine “the merits and demerits” of the evidence or discard any material collated by the investigating agency as inadmissible
  • The evidence must be considered “in its entirety” and “not by analysing individual pieces of evidence or circumstance”

Taken together, this means that courts are not only permitted but effectively required to swallow the prosecution’s story whole, while being explicitly forbidden from testing the truth or admissibility of the individual facts on which it rests. Section 43D(5) precludes judges from granting bail if even a “prima facie” case is made out, and Watali lowers the degree of satisfaction to ensure that the prima facie case is made out. The judgement is widely and often blindly cited by High Courts in several bail rejection orders, rendering judicial discretion subservient to the suspicions of the investigating officer.

Though Watali has cast a long shadow, not all subsequent courts have spoken in one voice. A line of liberty-affirming rulings by the Supreme Court has pushed back against its carceral logic. These trace all the way back to Shaheen Welfare Association v. Union of India (1996), where the Court acknowledged the legislature’s decision to sacrifice some personal liberty for the sake of protecting the community, but stipulated that this very sacrifice makes it “all the more necessary that investigation of such crimes is done efficiently” to ensure that “persons ultimately found innocent are not unnecessarily kept in jail for long periods.”

Within modern jurisprudence, the most significant post-Watali judgments are:

  1. Union of India v K.A. Najeeb (2021) recognised that protracted incarceration violates the Constitutional right to a speedy trial under Article 21. The Court held that:
  • Section 43­D(5) is not the sole metric, but merely ”another possible ground” for the Court to deny bail.
  • The rigours of a provision like Section 43­D(5) will “melt down where there is no likelihood of trial being completed within a reasonable time and the period of incarceration already undergone has exceeded a substantial part of the prescribed sentence.”
  1. Thwaha Fasal v Union of India (2021) observed that there must be an element of “mens rea” discernible from the facts and circumstances to constitute an offence under the UAPA. The Court ruled that:
  • The chargesheet must demonstrate some “overt act” from which it is reasonable to infer that the accused intended to further terrorist activities of a proscribed organisation.
  • In other words, vague allegations of conspiracy, based on the general behaviour of the accused, or of the materials that might have been recovered from them, is not enough; there must be a prima facie existence of intention to commit an actual terrorist act.
  1. Vernon v State of Maharashtra (2023) granted bail to two accused in the Bhima Koregaon conspiracy case on the ground that the prosecution’s evidence was of “weak probative quality.” The ruling affirmed that:
  • Courts must engage in (at least) a surface analysis of probative value of the evidence, as a prima facie case cannot reasonably be made out on weak or unbelievable evidence
  • When statutes have stringent provisions, there is a greater obligation on the Court to ensure swift adjudication: “graver the offence, greater should be the care taken to see that the offence would fall within the four corners of the Act.”
  1. Shoma Kanti Sen v State of Maharashtra (2024) granted bail to 66-year old Shoma Sen, accused in the Bhima Koregaon conspiracy case, who had been in detention for six years without the charges being framed. The Court highlighted that even the bail-restricting provision of Section 43D(5) must “bow before the right to bail” after prolonged incarceration:
  • Bail is a “fundamental right” under Article 21. Courts must consider whether the deprival of liberty from pre-trial detention, both at investigation and post-chargesheet stage, is justified as “reasonable,” “proportionate,” and “following a just and fair procedure.”
  • When considering the evidence prima-facie, the court noted that most of the materials from recovered from third parties, that the prosecution has not been able to “raise a hint of corroboration” to accusations of terror financing, and that there is no connection has been established to show a link to a banned organisation.

Because of this split jurisprudence, UAPA bail hearings have become intense sites of contestation between a jurisprudence of carcerality and a jurisprudence of liberty. The pattern of hearings in the Delhi Riots and similar conspiracy cases reveals that courts are faced with a choice: to either fill the gaps in the prosecution’s case with inferences and speculation to make out a prima facie case, or to insist on corroboration and refuse to substitute assumptions for individualised, factual, and particularistic allegations.

It is damning enough that liberty has been reduced to a gamble; worse still is the realisation that even this gamble is rigged with insidious, extra-legal interventions — as the saga of Asif Iqbal Tanha, Natasha Narwal, and Devangana Kalita will show.

The First Cracks: Bail for Asif, Devangana, and Natasha

On June 15, 2021, Justices Mridul and Bhamban of the Delhi High Court passed three orders granting bail to Asif Iqbal Tanha, Devangana Kalita, and Natasha Narwal. This was the first instance of bail granted on merits in the Delhi Riots cases.

The Delhi High Court began by examining the object and purpose of the UAPA. As a central legislation, it could only have been enacted under the Union’s legislative competence under Article 246 and the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution. Therefore, the intent of the UAPA and its amendments “could only have been, to deal with matters of profound impact on the ‘Defence of India’, nothing more and nothing less” (Asif Iqbal Tanha).

This, the Court observes, demonstrates that the stringent provisions of the UAPA are meant to apply only to exceptional cases, and not as a substitute for ordinary criminal law. In distinguishing the ‘exceptional’ from the ‘ordinary,’ the Court relies on Hitendra Vishnu Thakur v State of Maharashtra (1994) to emphasise that the extent of a terrorist activity “travels beyond the effect of an ordinary crime” and “must not arise merely by causing disturbance of law and order or even public order.” These distinctions have been further clarified in Ram Manohar Lohia v State of Bihar (1965), which devised “three concentric circles” to explain the gravity of offences – law and order being the largest, public order being the second, and security of the state being the smallest (gravest).

Having located UAPA within the narrowest circle, the Court turned to the definition of ‘terrorism’. Here, it relied on Maneka Gandhi vs. Union of India (1987) which cautioned that the “life and liberty of the person cannot be put on peril of an ambiguity,” holding that when concepts are inherently imprecise, “courts must strive to give to those concepts a narrower construction than what the literal words suggest.”

Given that UAPA charges are extremely serious with severe punishments, the Court emphasised that the “formation of an independent judicial view” at every step of the way is imperative. It then turned to the prosecution, which carried the investigators’ conspiracy narrative into the courtroom by arguing that what unfolded was not a “typical protest” but an “aggravated protest,” deliberately engineered to disrupt life in the capital. Examining the record, the Court stripped away what it called “superfluous verbiage, hyperbole, and stretched inferences,” and observed that the allegations – inflammatory speeches, organising chakka jams, instigating women to protest, stockpiling materials – are, at worst, evidence of “organised protests” which are “not uncommon when there is widespread opposition to Governmental or Parliamentary actions.” Even if such protests were noisy, disorderly, or crossed the constitutional limits of peaceful assembly, they could only be regulated or prohibited under ordinary law. A protest, even if it spills over into the zone of illegality, is in no way a terrorist act or a conspiracy understood by the UAPA (Natasha Narwal).

“It appears that in its anxiety to suppress dissent and in the morbid fear that matters may get out of hand, the State has blurred the line between the constitutionally guaranteed ‘right to protest’ and ‘terrorist activity’. If such blurring gains traction, democracy would be in peril.” – Delhi High Court (Devangana Kalita v State of Delhi NCT, 2021)

The Court recognised the Supreme Court’s ruling in Watali which bars courts from delving into the “merits or demerits” of evidence at the bail stage. It logically concluded that courts must equally resist from delivering into “suspicions and inferences that the prosecution may seek to draw,” and consider the evidence as-is. This reasoning struck at the heart of the prosecution’s case: the evidence showed that (i) the accused organised a protest and chakka jam and (ii) violence occurred in North Delhi, but there was no material demonstrating a causal link between the two. This gap was being filled by assumption and accusation, with the prosecution arguing that even the “likelihood” that the accused’s acts may threaten the nation are an offence within the meaning of sections 15 and 18 of the UAPA. The Court was thoroughly unconvinced, writing that “the foundations of our nation stand on surer footing than to be likely to be shaken by a protest, however vicious, organised by a tribe of college students.”

Next, the Court noted that the accused had spent over a year in pre-trial custody, with 740 prosecution witnesses yet to depose and the trial far from commencing. Relying on Najeeb, it underscored that Section 43D(5) does not override a Constitutional right. In response to the protests of the prosecution, the Court asked pointedly it should wait till the accused have “languished in prison long enough” till their right to a speedy trial “is fully and completely negated, before it steps in and wakes-up to such violation.” (Asif Iqbal Tanha)

Echoing the standard laid out in Thwaha Fasal, the Court questioned whether there was any specific and overt act linking the accused to a terrorist act or its preparation. It observed that the particular acts directly attributed to the accused are WhatsApp messages showing they organised a chakka-jaam, that Narwal and Kalita as part of Pinjra Tod (a lawful organisation) organised women for sit-ins, and that Tanha handed over a SIM card to a co- accused. In the absence of weapons, explosives, or evidence of incitement to violence, the Court dismissed the accusations finding that they built on “inference” and “grandiloquence” rather than concrete, particularised allegations sufficient to make out offences under Sections 15, 17, or 18 of the UAPA.

The three judgments can be read here.

“Not to be treated as precedent”

The very next day, the State rushed to the Supreme Court, complaining that the Delhi High Court had turned the UAPA “upside down.” On June 18, 2021, the Supreme Court heard the appeal and upheld bail. However, it added an extraordinary caveat: that the High Court’s judgment, including its interpretation of the UAPA, “shall not be treated as a precedent and may not be relied upon in any proceeding.”

Advocate Gautam Bhatia has explained that while the phrase “not to be treated as a precedent” has become a recurring feature in Indian jurisprudence, it is entirely outside the law.[4] When a constitutional court delivers a reasoned judgment, the appellate court’s role is only to decide whether it was right or wrong. Until reversed, that judgment carries the force of law. It is not within the Supreme Court’s authority to act as if the judgment of another constitutional court simply does not exist — and worse, to order every other court to participate in this legal fiction.

The Delhi High Court’s judgment was not reversed but absurdly quarantined. The only possible objective was to ensure that the order could not be binding precedent used to secure bail for any other accused in the Delhi Riots conspiracy case, given the clear factual parity. In the interim order, the Supreme Court explains that “the idea was to protect the State against use of the judgment on enunciation of law qua interpretation of the provisions of the UAPA Act in a bail matter.” The highest court in the land stated unequivocally that it was not concerned with protecting individual liberty against the State, but with protecting the State against individuals seeking liberty[5].

The Supreme Court’s order can be read here:

 

“All Appeals Dismissed”

Five years after the riots that shook Northeast Delhi, on September 2, 2025 at 2:30 pm, the Division Bench of Justices Naveen Chawla and Shalinder Kaur of the Delhi High Court read out the verdict on the bail applications of Umar Khalid, Sharjeel Imam, Athar Khan, Khalid Saifi, Mohd Saleem Khan, Shifa-ur-Rehman, Meeran Haider, Gulfisha Fatima, and Shadab Ahmed. “All appeals are dismissed.”

Another coordinate bench of Justices Subramonium Prasad and Harish Shankar pronounced a separate order denying bail to Tasleem Ahmed.

The first order runs into 133 pages. The judgment begins by canonising the conspiratorial narrative into a statement of facts. The prosecution’s case rested on two evidentiary limbs:

  1. Testimonies of “protected witnesses” – anonymous individuals who claim to have overheard the accused having secret meetings where they conspired to bring about violent riots
  2. Circumstantial material – WhatsApp messages, distribution of “inciteful” pamphlets, public speeches calling for bandhs, chakka jam and non-cooperation, a “flurry of phone calls” after the riots

The Court relied on Gurwinder Singh vs State Of Punjab (2024), which held that “mere delay in trial pertaining to grave offences cannot be used as a ground to grant bail.” The ruling encapsulates the eight-point ‘Test for Rejection of Bail’ as laid down by Watali:

  1. Meaning of “Prima facie true” (On the face of it, the materials must show the complicity)
  2. Degree of Satisfaction (Lower that ordinary criminal law)
  3. Reasoning necessary, but no detailed evaluation of evidence
  4. Record a finding on broad probabilities, not based on proof beyond doubt
  5. Limitation under Section 43D(5) applies from registration of FIR till conclusion of trial
  6. Material on record must be analysed as a whole; no piecemeal analysis
  7. Contents of documents to be presumed as true
  8. Admissibility of documents relied upon by Prosecution cannot be questioned

The Court then analyses the accused’s roles in four parts, grouping individuals by protest site or broad organisational function. At the outset, this clubbing masks the absence of individualised evidence and allows the High Court to skirt its duty to test whether the allegations against each person were specific and particularised. Inferences are treated as facts, generic circumstances as evidence, and ten people are reduced to shadowy actors with undefined roles in a pre-narratavised conspiracy.

Sharjeel Imam and Umar Khalid

At the time of hearing, Sharjeel had been imprisoned for 2044 days and Umar for 1815 days. This does not seem to perturb the Court in the slightest, which instead zeroes in on the prosecution’s label that the two were the “intellectual architects” behind the alleged conspiracy. Nowhere does the judgment ask what it means to be an “intellectual architect,” or explain how mere membership of WhatsApp groups, distribution of pamphlets in college campuses, and untested testimony about meetings can be stretched into so far as to infer that two Muslim student activists masterminded communal violence in the national capital which resulted in an overwhelming proportion of Muslims being killed. It is worth noting here that Sharjeel had already been in custody since a month before the riots, and Umar had been under 24×7 police protection and electronic surveillance since 2018.

In Paragraphs 132-133, the Court refers to the ‘inflammatory speeches’ given by Sharjeel at Aligarh, Asanol, and Chakand and by Umar at Amravati. Aside from noting that they were ‘preaching to the masses by misleading them into believing that the CAA/NRC is an Anti-Muslim law’ – a political judgement that is utterly irrelevant to the legal question of culpability – the Court offers absolutely no textual or contextual analysis of the speeches. Absent even a surface-level inquiry into how the rhetoric allegedly crossed the threshold from protected speech under Article 19(1)(a) into incitement or terrorist conduct, the Court simply concludes that the role assigned by the prosecution “cannot be lightly brushed aside.”

“We will not respond to violence with violence. We will not respond to hate with hate. If they spread hate, we will respond to it by spreading love. If they beat us with lathis, we will hold aloft the tri-color. If they fire bullets, then we will hold the Constitution and raise our hands. If they jail us, we will go to jail happily singing, ‘Saarey Jahaan Se Acha, Hindustan Hamara.’ But we will not let you destroy our country.” – Umar Khalid (Speech at Amravati, February 2020)

A full transcript of Umar’s speech can be read here.

 

A portion of Sharjeel Imam’s speech at the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) was broadcast by electronic media channels and shared apparently out of context on social media to portray him as an Islamist pushing a secessionist agenda. The law draws a distinction between discussion, advocacy, and incitement – “Mere discussion or even advocacy of a particular cause howsoever unpopular is at the heart of Article 19(1)(a). It is only when such discussion or advocacy reaches the level of incitement that Article 19(2) kicks in” (Shreya Singhal v Union of India, 2015). There is no evidence to establish a causal link between Sharjeel’s speech and an overt act of violence.

Athar Khan, Shadab Ahmed, Abdul Khalid Saifi, and Mohd Saleem Khan

The State alleged that they were members of “various WhatsApp groups, which facilitated organized coordination of protests,” delivered “provocative speeches on religious lines,” and were present at “various meetings” on the night of February 23. The specific accusations against the four individuals are:

  • Athar Khan and Shadab Ahmed: Were “in agreement” to destroy or cover Government-installed CCTV cameras so that they could “operate fearlessly.” This was based on statements by protected witnesses, testimony by police, and membership of the DPSG WhatsApp group.
  • Saleem Khan: Dislocated a government CCTV camera with a stick-like object to attack the police and non-Muslims. CCTV footage allegedly showing him disabling a camera.
  • Khalid Saifi: Raised funds and procured firearms for the conspiracy through NGO and NRI contacts. This is based on protected witness statements and CDR location data placing him at protests.

At the time of the hearings, Athar Khan had been in custody for 1889 days, Shadab Ahmed for 1976 days, Saleem Khan for 2002 days, and Khalid Saifi for 2016 days. Too many gaps in the prosecution’s case remain unanswered.

  • Statements of the Protected witnesses were recorded after a considerable lapse of time from the registration of the FIR, and conveniently filled up the gaps in the prosecution case. The defence contends that these may be planted witnesses. At the stage of bail, their identities are not known to the defence.
  • Police witnesses, including Constables and Head Constables, have given almost identical statements across all three FIRs. The defence contends that their testimonies were either templated or manufactured. At the stage of bail, the defence cannot cross-examine their testimonies.
  • Mere presence in a WhatsApp group (not banned organizations) or attending meetings without any overt act or instigation, cannot be construed as participation in a criminal conspiracy.
    • Athar Khan and Shadab Ahmed have not posted a single message in the DPSG group demonstrating intention of blocking roads or causing riots.
    • The only overt act attributed to Saleem Khan is the turning away of a CCTV camera, for which he has already been granted bail in the FIR No. 60/2020.
    • There is no evidence of receipt of money by Khalid Saifi for the procurement of firearms. He is a resident of Chand Bagh and it cannot be suspicious that he was located in the area

Shifa-ur-Rehman and Meeran Haider

The prosecution claimed that Shifa-ur-Rehman and Meeran Haider managed protest sites across Delhi, attended meetings of the Jamia Coordination Committee (JCC) at the Alumni Association of Jamia Millia Islamia (AAJMI) office, and raised funds for the protests. The specific accusations against the two are:

  • Shifa-ur-Rehman: As President of AAJMI, he generated fake bills to cover up money used in the conspiracy. The Court holds that “the possibility of misuse of the position … cannot be ruled out”
  • Meeran Haider: Alleged to have delivered inflammatory speeches at the behest of Umar Khalid and raised funds for the riots

At the time of the hearings, Shifa had been in custody for 1956 days and Meeran for 1981 days. The judgment does not explain how passive presence in various meetings or association with lawful student and alumni organisations indicate intention, preparation, or participation in a terrorist act or conspiracy.

  • The allegations of fund-collection or fraud are uncorroborated by forensic or direct evidence, and sustained solely based on vague and uncorroborated testimony of protected witnesses. Since the veracity of the prosecution witnesses can only be tested at trial, it is illogical to accept their statements as gospel truth at this stage.
  • There are no allegations of AAJMI itself having engaged in any unlawful activities. Applying Watali’s standard of ‘broad probabilities,’ which “possibility” cannot be “ruled out”: Shifa “misusing” his Presidency of AAJMI, or belated statements from anonymous witnesses being unreliable?
  • No speech or message has been attributed to the accused wherein they can be seen inciting or participating in violence. Several documents on record, including correspondence and public statements, show them consistently discouraging unlawful and disruptive activity.

Gulfisha Fatima

Gulfisha was accused of “playing a pivotal role in mobilising women for the protests” through the WhatsApp groups ‘Auraton ka Inqalab’ and ‘Warriors.’ She is also alleged to have blocked the road near Jafrabad Metro Station and instigated women to violence. She is further accused of receiving funds from co-accused Tahir Hussain to support the riots.

At the time of hearings, Gulfisha had been in custody for 1973 days.

  • The chats of the ‘Auraton ka Inqalab’ group are not a part of the case record, and the chat of the ‘Warriors’ group pertain only to participation in legitimate peaceful protests
  • There are no reports of chakka-jaam at Jafrabad metro station on February 22, 2020. The protest was peaceful and completely non-violent.
  • The allegation that Hussain “handed over a bundle of notes” to Gulfisha for some illegal purpose stands solely on the testimony of Protected witness Saturn. The prosecution has not explained the amount allegedly given or the date on which such money was handed over.

On the Argument of Parity

All the nine accused drew the Court’s attention to the factual parity between their cases and the cases of Devangana Kalita, Natasha Narwal, and Asif Iqbal Tanha. All nine were dismissed, with the Court sheltering behind the Supreme Court’s caveat that the earlier Delhi High Court bail orders “shall not be treated as precedent.”

The injustice is the starkest in Gulfisha Fatima’s case, which is materially indistinguishable from Devangana and Natasha’s. The High Court takes great pains to draw a distinction, seizing on the absurd claim that Gulfisha’s creation of WhatsApp groups to mobilise women for protests set her apart.

The order in Sharjeel Imam & Ors v State of Delhi can be read here:

 

Tasleem Ahmed and the Justification for Prolonged Incarceration

In a separate order, the Delhi High Court denied bail to Tasleem Ahmed holding that since the maximum punishment prescribed under Sections 18 and 20 of the UAPA is life imprisonment, therefore prolonged incarceration “cannot be the sole factor for grant of bail.” This is a wilful perversion of Najeeb and a betrayal to the Constitutional promise of Liberty. At the time of the hearings, Tasleem Ahmed had been incarcerated for 1901 days.

The Court further held that “majority of delay is attributable to the accused.” In five years, Ahmed has not taken even a single day’s adjournment.

This argument was popularised earlier this year by former Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, and instantly picked up by the alt-right media who dismiss the prolonged pre-trial incarceration of the Delhi riots accused by claiming they are ‘forum shopping.’ CJP has debunked this myth, reporting how the glacial pace of the case has been systemically manufactured through institutional churn and prosecutorial obstruction. The bail pleas were filed in 2022, and were passed on to three different Benches. Twice, they had to be heard afresh since judges who reserved the verdict did not pronounce the order and were subsequently transferred. The pleas have been listed, on average, 60–70 times each. Listings were cancelled majorly because special benches failed to assemble (44 occasions for Imam alone) or judges were unavailable due to workload or roster conflicts[6].

The order in Tasleem Ahmed v State of Delhi can be read here:

 

The Delhi High Court’s reasoning in both these orders is not Constitutionally-oriented, but outcome-oriented. The same Court which, in 2021, examined the merits of the case against the co-accused and found it bereft of any specific or particularised evidence not coated in “alarming and hyperbolic verbiage,” now claims to avoid the merits while uncritically leaning on the prosecution’s narrative to sustain detention.

What is to be Done?

After five years, the Delhi High Court was able to look the people of India in the eye and declare that the trial is “progressing at a natural pace,” rationalising that “a hurried trial would also be detrimental to the rights of both the Appellants and the State.”

The Delhi Riots Conspiracy case is one of ritualised silencing: incarceration without a speedy trial, prosecutions on conspiratorial hysteria, and courts filling in narrative gaps with inferences, assumptions, and outright absurdities. Sharjeel Imam and his co-accused are prisoners of the Hindutva State – hostages to the game of nation-building, and a warning to Indian Muslims and all marginalised people to hold their tongue.

But “for a human being not to speak is to die.” [7]

The UAPA is presented as the public’s weapon to defend society from terrorism. In reality, it is a distractionary alarm-bell to silence those who speak truth to power. The law does not stand above the social class-structure as a neutral protector, but preserves and serves the interests of the dominant and powerful class, embodied by the State and its machinery. By branding dissent as “terrorism,” the state shields the terror it unleashes everyday – through poverty, communal violence, dispossession, and repression.

The venomous web of the UAPA collapses the facade of ‘separation of powers,’ until the same script echoes from sub-inspector Arvind Kumar, to legal officers representing the state in constitutional courts and then, finally even significant sections of the judiciary. History will record that while the Indian judiciary and its judges searched hard to uncover communal provocation in Umar Khalid’s speech, they appeared blind to the seething hate and open calls to violence by those in positions of power, like the ‘honourable ministers’ Kapil Mishra, Anurag Thakur, and Parvesh Verma.

There have been persistent calls that a law such as the UAPA must be repealed. There have been strong appeals that political prisoners must be released. Above all, Courts must serve people’s justice. It is easy to succumb to hopelessness in the face of the mammoth State apparatus. At such a time, hope flickers through the words of Umar Khalid.

In a speech recorded before his arrest, Umar told us that “They are silencing us and putting us behind bars of jails, but they are also putting you behind bars of fear and falsehood.” Fear is an authoritarian state’s greatest weapon.

Remember this is what the State fears. Voices, like the ones at Shaheen Bagh. Alliances, like the ones at Elgar Parishad. Leaders, like Meeran Haider and Gulfisha Fatima.

Remember Umar’s final appeal. “Don’t be afraid. Speak up against injustice. Ask for the release of those who are being implicated in false cases. Raise your voice against every kind of tyranny.” 

How will we speak?

(The legal research team of CJP consists of lawyers and interns; this legal resource has been worked on by Raaz)

Footnotes

  1. Abdul Rahman, Five years since Delhi was set on fire by the right and the victims were blamed,’ (People’s Dispatch, 22 February 2025)
  2. Betwa Sharma, ‘How Kapil Mishra Allegedly Broke The Law, Was Never Prosecuted & Became Delhi’s Law Minister’ (Article 14, 20 March 2025)
  3. CJP Team, ‘Delhi Riots 2020: Stalled justice & the architecture of indefinite detention, FIR 59/2020 in perspective’ (Citizens for Justice and Peace, July 2025)
  4. Gautam Bhatia, ‘A Graveyard for Civil Rights Jurisprudence: The Devangana Kalita Bail Order’ (ICLP Blog, May 2023)
  5. Ibid.
  6. Supra, 3
  7. Varavara Rao, ‘The Word is the World’ (Captive Imagination)

[1] Abdul Rahman, Five years since Delhi was set on fire by the right and the victims were blamed,’ (People’s Dispatch, 22 February 2025)

[2] Betwa Sharma, ‘How Kapil Mishra Allegedly Broke The Law, Was Never Prosecuted & Became Delhi’s Law Minister’ (Article 14, 20 March 2025)

[3] CJP Team, ‘Delhi Riots 2020: Stalled justice & the architecture of indefinite detention, FIR 59/2020 in perspective’ (Citizens for Justice and Peace, July 2025)

[4] Gautam Bhatia, ‘A Graveyard for Civil Rights Jurisprudence: The Devangana Kalita Bail Order’ (ICLP Blog, May 2023)

[5] Ibid

[6] Supra, 3

[7] Varavara Rao, ‘The Word is the World’ (Captive Imagination)

 

Related:

UAPA: Delhi HC denies bail, Umar Khalid’s Incarceration to Continue

Delhi court rejects application to handcuff Umar Khalid & Khalid Saifi

Umar Khalid’s speech prima facie not acceptable, obnoxious: Delhi HC

Protest was secular, chargesheet is communal: Dr. Umar Khalid’s counsel

Umar Khalid bail hearing: Counsel points out “cooked up” witnesses

Chargesheet against me looks like a film script: Umar Khalid to court

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Delhi Court sentences riots accused for promoting hatred against Muslims, sentences him to 3 years in custody https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-court-sentences-riots-accused-for-promoting-hatred-against-muslims-sentences-him-to-3-years-in-custody/ Fri, 11 Jul 2025 12:20:21 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=42790 Lokesh Kumar Solanki convicted for inciting violence during 2020 Delhi riots; court calls his conduct “fuel to already simmering tensions” but releases him citing maximum sentence already served

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In a significant order addressing hate speech during the 2020 North East Delhi riots, a Delhi court has sentenced a man to three years’ imprisonment for promoting enmity and inciting communal hatred against Muslims. However, given that the convict had already spent over three years in judicial custody, the Court ordered his immediate release upon payment of a fine.

The case pertains to Lokesh Kumar Solanki, alias Rajput, who was found guilty under Sections 153A and 505 of the Indian Penal Code, which penalise promoting enmity between different religious groups and circulating rumours or statements likely to cause public mischief.

Delivering the sentencing order on July 8, 2025, Additional Sessions Judge Parveen Singh of the Karkardooma Courts said that Solanki had “added fuel to the already simmering tensions” in February 2020 by disseminating inflammatory messages aimed at stoking hatred and inciting violence against the Muslim community. These actions, the judge noted, were especially grave in the backdrop of communal riots then engulfing North East Delhi.

“The fact, that during the tense period of February 2020, the convict had added fuel to the already simmering tensions by spreading messages which were intended to promote enmity and hatred for Muslim community and induced the members of the group to commit crime against Muslim, calls for no leniency and makes the offence very serious in nature.” (Para 7)

Despite the seriousness of the offence, the court acknowledged that Solanki had already been incarcerated for over three years, the maximum sentence provided under the relevant sections. Consequently, the judge concluded that justice would be served by awarding the maximum sentence but ordering his release since no further imprisonment could legally be imposed.

“However, the fact remains that convict has already undergone the imprisonment of more than 03 years which is the maximum punishment which could be awarded for offences punishable u/s 153-A/ 505 IPC.” (Para 8)

Arguments raised

Prosecution sought maximum sentence: During the sentencing hearing, Special Public Prosecutor Saleem Ahmed urged the court to impose the maximum punishment under both provisions, citing the content of Solanki’s messages and their intended communal impact. He argued that Solanki’s conduct was calculated to disturb public order and warranted no clemency.

Defence pleads for compassion: Appearing for the convict, Advocate Nishant Kumar Tyagi highlighted Solanki’s youth, his family responsibilities, particularly his aged parents, and the fact that he had already spent more than three years behind bars awaiting trial and judgment. He requested that any sentence be ordered to run concurrently and that the court take into account the period of pre-conviction custody.

Order of the Court: Sentence imposed, fine levied

After hearing both sides, the Court sentenced Solanki as follows:

  • Three years’ simple imprisonment under Section 153A IPC, along with a fine of ₹25,000. In default of payment, an additional six months’ simple imprisonment.
  • Three years’ simple imprisonment under Section 505 IPC, along with another fine of ₹25,000. In default, six more months’ simple imprisonment.

The sentences will run concurrently, and the convict was granted the benefit of Section 428 CrPC, which allows set-off for time already spent in custody.

Since Solanki has already served more than the maximum prescribed period of imprisonment, the court ordered his release, subject to payment of the total fine of ₹50,000. The order notes that the fine has been paid.

Broader Context: A message on hate speech

This case is one of the few successful convictions in connection with incitement to violence during the 2020 Delhi riots, which left over 50 people dead and hundreds injured. The court’s strong words reaffirm that hate speech, particularly during periods of communal unrest, will not be treated as a benign offence.

At the same time, the order reflects the tension in India’s criminal justice system between protracted trial processes and the need for proportionate sentencing. Though the court recognised the gravity of Solanki’s offence, it was legally constrained from ordering any further imprisonment.

The order of the Delhi Court may be read here.

Related:

How the Delhi riots case remains stagnant with close to a dozen student leaders incarcerated

“This Means FIR”: Delhi Court orders further investigation, FIR against BJP leader Kapil Mishra five years after Delhi riots

5 Years of Delhi Riots: Some Punished, Some Rewarded!

Delhi Police on Trial: Three court orders reveal collusion, cover-ups, and custodial torture by police officers during 2020 Delhi riots

 

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“This Means FIR”: Delhi Court orders further investigation, FIR against BJP leader Kapil Mishra five years after Delhi riots https://sabrangindia.in/this-means-fir-delhi-court-orders-further-investigation-fir-against-bjp-leader-kapil-mishra-five-years-after-delhi-riots/ Wed, 02 Apr 2025 09:02:15 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=40893 The court remarks that Mishra’s speech created a communal divide and needs thorough investigation; Police warned of legal consequences if they fail to ensure compliance with the court’s directive.

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In a significant development amid political pressure and allegations of cover-ups, a Delhi court on April 1, 2025, directed further investigation against BJP leader and Delhi Law Minister, Kapil Mishra over his alleged involvement in the 2020 North-East Delhi riots. The ruling marks a crucial first step in addressing long-standing allegations of incitement and complicity in the violence.

Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate Vaibhav Chaurasia of the Rouse Avenue Courts orally remarked, “this means FIR,” indicating that the court’s directive for further investigation effectively necessitates the registration of a First Information Report against Mishra. The judge observed that a cognizable offence had been established concerning one of the incidents detailed in the complaint, warranting deeper scrutiny.

The court stated that the evidence presented by the prosecution clearly placed Mishra at the scene and that “all the things were corroborating.” It further noted that Mishra, during interrogation, admitted to being in the area and acknowledged that people had gathered around him, many of whom he knew. This admission, the court stated, “fortifies the allegations of the complainant.”

Significantly, the court pointed out that Mishra’s statement was not framed in terms of support for or opposition to the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) but rather in explicitly communal terms. The court noted that Mishra “had not framed his statement under ‘Pro-CAA or Anti-CAA’ but rather ‘DUSRI TARAF MUSLIM’ with the distinction of us and them, wherein them is ‘DUSRI TARAF MUSLIM.’” The judge remarked that such rhetoric “clearly establishes sides and requires investigation to unearth the truth.”

As per a report in LiveLaw, the court further observed that Mishra’s presence in North-East Delhi a day before the riots, which he himself admitted, could not be ignored. Additionally, it directed that senior police officer DCP Ved Prakash Surya be examined, following allegations by the complainant that Surya had threatened protesters, saying, “If you did not stop this protest, then consequence will happen here that you will be killed.” The judge stressed that “his personal interrogation is necessary,” adding, “The series of events reveals that perhaps, if allegations of complainant are found to be true, then DCP Ved Prakash Surya knows something which this Judiciary does not.”

At the same time, the court stated that if the complainant’s allegations were proven false, the Delhi Police would be at liberty to take action under Section 182 of the IPC for filing false information. It also directed the DCP of North-East Delhi to ensure that the order for further investigation was sent to the appropriate police station within its jurisdiction. Failure to comply, the court warned, would hold the DCP legally accountable.

The Delhi Police has been ordered to file a compliance report by April 16, 2025, the next date of hearing. Petitioner Mohammad Ilyas was represented by Advocate Mehmood Pracha, while Special Public Prosecutor Amit Prasad appeared for the Delhi Police.

This directive represents a major step towards accountability in the 2020 Delhi riots case, even if it is beginning 5 years down the lane. Despite the political climate and prior reluctance to act against influential figures, the court’s insistence on further investigation highlights the need for an impartial and thorough probe into the events leading to the communal violence.

Details of the complaint against Delhi Law Minister Kapil Mishra

A Delhi court was hearing a complaint filed by Mohammad Ilyas, seeking an investigation into the alleged role of BJP leader and Delhi Minister Kapil Mishra in the 2020 North-East Delhi riots. The plea, however, was met with strong opposition from the Delhi Police, who argued that Mishra was being falsely implicated as part of a “well-planned conspiracy.”

The complainant, Mohammad Ilyas, sought the registration of an FIR against Mishra, along with then SHO of Dayalpur police station and five other individuals, including BJP MLA Mohan Singh Bisht and former BJP MLAs Jagdish Pradhan and Satpal Sansad.

According to Ilyas, on February 23, 2020, he personally witnessed Mishra and his associates blocking a road and destroying the handcarts of street vendors. He also alleged that the then Deputy Commissioner of Police (North-East) and other officers were present alongside Mishra as he issued warnings to anti-CAA protesters, demanding they vacate the area or face dire consequences.

Ilyas had moved the court in December 2024, urging an inquiry into the roles of Mishra and six others in the riots, which resulted in 53 deaths and over 700 injuries. In March 2025, the Delhi Police reiterated their stance, arguing that Mishra’s role had already been investigated and “nothing incarcerating” had been found.

In his petition, Ilyas specifically named Mishra, Mustafabad MLA and Deputy Speaker Mohan Singh Bisht, the then DCP (North-East), the then SHO of Dayalpur police station, and former BJP legislator Jagdish Pradhan, holding them responsible for inciting the riots. As reported by The Hindu, Ilyas stated that he saw Mishra and his associates obstructing a road in Kardampuri and damaging street vendors’ stalls. Additionally, he alleged that the former North-East DCP and several police officers stood by as Mishra issued threats to anti-CAA demonstrators.

Ilyas also accused the former Dayalpur SHO and others of vandalising mosques across North-East Delhi, further intensifying concerns over the role of law enforcement in the communal violence.

Delhi Police opposes plea seeking FIR

On March 6, 2025, the Delhi Police filed a written submission before a Delhi court, opposing a plea that sought the registration of an FIR against BJP leader and Delhi Minister Kapil Mishra for his alleged involvement in the 2020 North-East Delhi riots.

The police contended that the complaint, filed by Mohammad Ilyas, was part of a “well-planned conspiracy” to falsely implicate Mishra in the riots. They asserted that the BJP leader had no role in the violence and was being deliberately framed.

As part of their argument, the prosecution referred to conversations from various WhatsApp groups, including the Delhi Protest Support Group (DPSG), alleging that certain individuals had orchestrated a social media campaign against Mishra. The police claimed that the hashtag #ArrestKapilMishra was being used strategically to construct a misleading narrative around his involvement in the riots.

Additionally, the Delhi Police maintained that Mishra’s alleged role had already been investigated and that no incriminating evidence was found against him. In an earlier submission from October 2024, the police argued that the riots were the outcome of a “pre-planned conspiracy” designed to incite violence in Muslim-majority areas, particularly around mosques and religious sites. The goal, they claimed, was to escalate “protests” into “Chakkajaam” (road blockades) once a critical mass of demonstrators had gathered.

The police further stated that misleading WhatsApp messages were circulated at the time, falsely alleging that a mob led by Mishra had initiated the violence. They insisted that these claims were part of an attempt to create a false narrative and implicate him in the riots.

Opposition demands resignation of Kapil Mishra following court’s order

The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the Congress on April 1, 2025, demanded the resignation of Delhi Law Minister Kapil Mishra after a city court directed the registration of an FIR to investigate his alleged role in the 2020 North-East Delhi riots.

Addressing a press conference, Delhi AAP president Saurabh Bharadwaj stated that sufficient evidence of Mishra’s involvement was already in the public domain and called for his immediate arrest. “Mishra should resign and be arrested, as the court has ordered an FIR to probe his role in the riots. For the sake of morality, he should step down, just as others accused in the case have been arrested,” Bharadwaj asserted.

As per the report of Times of India, Bharadwaj further criticised the delay in legal proceedings, pointing out that it took over five years for the judicial system to act on the case. Bharadwaj also alleged that a judge who had previously directed the police to take action in the case was transferred to another state.

AAP’s chief spokesperson Priyanka Kakkar echoed the demand, questioning why Mishra was being treated differently from others accused in the riots. “Every other accused in the Delhi riots case has been arrested. Why is Kapil Mishra an exception?” she asked.

Delhi Congress president Devender Yadav also called for Mishra’s resignation, citing the court’s findings. “The Rouse Avenue court has established that there is a cognisable offence against him. This is a serious matter, and if there is any sense of morality left, he should resign immediately to allow for a fair and independent investigation,” Yadav said.

Delhi riots case and Mishra’s incendiary speech

The 2020 North-East Delhi riots: The 2020 Delhi riots, which took place between 24 and 26 February, led to significant violence in North-East Delhi, resulting in 53 deaths, over 500 injuries, and extensive property damage. Ironically, while a majority of those killed and harmed were Muslims, most of those who have been arrested for their role during the riots are also Muslims. Several student leaders and activists, including Umar Khalid, Gulfisha Fatima, and Sharjeel Imam, were accused by the police of conspiring to incite the riots. These remain in jail, with the trial yet to begin. However, a fact-finding team formed by the Delhi Minorities Commission concluded that the violence was “planned and targeted” and held BJP leader Kapil Mishra responsible for triggering it.

Mishra’s alleged role in inciting violence: Delhi Cabinet Minister and BJP leader Kapil Mishra is accused of provoking violence through a speech delivered at Maujpur Chowk on February 23, 2020. In his speech, he issued an ultimatum, demanding that the police clear anti-CAA protest sites within three days or risk intervention by his supporters.

The fact-finding report had noted that “violence started in different pockets almost immediately after the short speech of Shri Kapil Mishra on 23 February, 2020, at Maujpur, in which he openly called for forcefully removing the protestors at Jafrabad in North-East Delhi.” It further highlighted Mishra’s explicit warning: “After that, we will not listen to the police if roads are not cleared after three days…”

The committee criticised the Delhi Police for failing to act against Mishra, despite senior officer DCP Ved Prakash Surya standing beside him during the speech. The report stated that “the open admission of ‘not listening’ to the police and extra-legal tactics should have been seen by the authorities as inciting violence.” The committee concluded that by not apprehending Mishra, the police “failed to take the first and most immediate preventive step needed to avoid violence and protect life and property.”

Legal challenges against Mishra and other political leaders: Multiple legal petitions have been filed seeking an FIR against Kapil Mishra for inciting violence. Human rights defender Harsh Mander had petitioned for an FIR against Mishra under Section 153 of the IPC (provocation for riot) and Section 125 of the Representation of People’s Act (causing ill will between communities for electoral purposes). These sections do not require prior government sanction.

Similarly, CPI (M) leader Brinda Karat has been pursuing legal action against politicians whose speeches allegedly incited violence against anti-CAA-NRC-NPR protestors. She approached the Delhi High Court after her plea to register an FIR against Union Minister Anurag Thakur and BJP MP Pravesh Verma for their alleged hate speeches was dismissed by a trial court on technical grounds. The trial court had ruled that a prior sanction from the central government was required before proceeding. Karat challenged this ruling, arguing that such procedural objections should be addressed early to prevent unnecessary delays in cases involving hate speech. (Details may be read here.)

 

Related:

Kapil Mishra delivers anti-Muslim statements, targets activist Harsh Mander in his speech

Kajal Hindusthani, Kapil Mishra, amongst others, target Muslim religious minorities, calls for their “erasure” and “Ghar Wapasi” unchallenged

Did Kapil Mishra’s Ram Navami speech incite communal violence, demolition drive in Khargone?

I have no regrets, if need be, I’d do it again: Kapil Mishra

CJP moves MEITY against Kapil Mishra’s communal social media posts

 

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5 Years of Delhi Riots: Some Punished, Some Rewarded! https://sabrangindia.in/5-years-of-delhi-riots-some-punished-some-rewarded/ Wed, 26 Feb 2025 09:57:03 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=40297 The story of five years of Delhi riots in short is -- one of the accused, Umar Khalid, has not got bail yet, while another accused (although Delhi Police does not consider him so) Kapil Mishra has become Delhi’s Law and Justice Minister.

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The wounds of the Delhi communal violence that took place five years ago, or rather the conspiracy to burn Delhi, have not yet healed…justice has not been delivered yet.

Where is justice lost…what happened in these five years? Many innocents are still behind bars and many accused are still roaming free. One of them has even become an MLA and minister on a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ticket.

Five years ago, between February 23 and February 26, 2020, a conspiracy was hatched to light a communal fire in Delhi. The north-eastern part of the capital city was made the target of this attack.

About 53 people lost their lives in this communal violence. Hundreds were injured. There was huge loss of life and property in the violence that lasted for four days. Many houses and shops were burnt to ashes.

In common parlance, we call this a ‘riot’, but if the right words are used, it was an attack. A revenge against the Shaheen Bagh movement against the Citizenship Amendment Act or CAA. Statistics testify this.

Delhi Police figures say that among those killed, 40 were Muslims and 13 were Hindus.

Unfortunately, the government and the mainstream media largely reported one-sided stories and blamed the Muslim community for this violence. This is what is being propagated even today.

As per the Special Cell and Crime Branch of Delhi Police, there was a “deep conspiracy” behind the Delhi riots, the “foundation of which was laid” during the anti-CAA and NRC protests in 2019.

This conspiracy has been mentioned in case number 59/2020. Delhi Police considers former JNU student leader, Umar Khalid, as the “mastermind” of the Delhi violence.

Special Public Prosecutor Amit Prasad has argued that the violence was part of a conspiracy to create trouble during the visit of then US President Donald Trump to India.

The violence started in Jaffrabad in North East Delhi, where women were staging a sit-in protest against the CAA on the Seelampur-Jaffrabad-Maujpur Road.

At that time, the freshly minted BJP leader, Kapil Mishra (who had switched over from the Aam Aadmi Party), called upon Delhi Police to clear the streets, and threatening to do so himself with the help of his supporters. It is after this that the violence broke out.

Recall that despite all their efforts, BJP had badly lost in the Assembly elections held in February 2020.  Many analysts say that the stunning defeat had flustered BJP. (This year that defeat has been avenged. After 27 years, BJP has once again come to power in Delhi with full majority.)

The backdrop of the communal violence had already been created, but ultimately it is innocent people who became its victims.

In 2022, four former judges and a former Home Secretary had released a fact-finding report on the reality of the Delhi violence. The report had raised serious questions on the investigation by Delhi Police. Also, strong comments were made on the role of Union Home Ministry, Delhi government and the media.

The fact-finding report also found that speeches made by BJP leaders like Kapil Mishra had also played a role in instigating people, which led to the violence.

Social activist Harsh Mander had even filed a petition in Delhi’s Patiala Court saying that an FIR should be registered against Kapil Mishra. This petition is still pending in the court.

Notably, in July 2020, Delhi Police had told the Delhi High Court that no evidence had been found against Kapil Mishra and other BJP leaders’ speeches having instigated the violence.

The same Kapil Mishra has now become an MLA and minister by contesting the recent Delhi Assembly elections from Karawal Nagar on a BJP ticket. But there is no discussion in the media about his role in the 2020 communal violence.

According to various media reports, the police have registered a total of 758 FIRs related to the violence.

Some reports published in 2024 said a total of 2,619 people had been arrested, out of which 2,094 people are out on bail.

The court has so far found only 47 people guilty and has acquitted 183 people. Cases against 75 people have been dismissed due to lack of sufficient evidence.

Delhi Police has so far arrested at least 24 people, of which 10 have been released on bail in the case of Head Constable Ratan Lal, who was killed in the line of duty during the Delhi violence.

Also, the 11 accused arrested in the murder case of Ankit Sharma, who worked in the Intelligence Bureau, are still in jail. Sharma’s body was found in a drain in Chand Bagh on February 26, 2020.

Notably, the fact-finding report has put its finger on  another accused in the Delhi violence —  Delhi Police. Questions have been raised on the role of Delhi Police in allowing these riots to happen and for inaction and delay in stopping the violence. Besides, Delhi Police have also been accused on brutalities.

Hearing in a case related to the Delhi riots in September 2024, a court had acquitted 10 accused persons, raising questions on the ‘theory’ of Delhi Police. All the accused belonged to the Muslim community. They were accused of attacking a house and a shop in Gokulpuri police station area of ​​North East Delhi.

Additional Sessions Judge Pulastya Pramchala of Delhi’s Karkardooma Court had said that “suspicions over the allegations against the accused are not beyond doubt.”

During these four-five years, there were many such occasions during the hearing in the court, when the court made harsh remarks on the Delhi Police and described the level of their investigation as poor.

In August, 2023, while hearing the arrest of three people in the case of rioting in FIR No. 71/20 case of Dayalpur Police Station, Karkaduma Court had commented that the incidents had not been properly and completely investigated. It noted that the charge sheet in the case had been filed with prejudice in a bid to hide the mistakes made in the beginning.

Because of this kind of investigation and attitude of the police, many youth are still languishing in jail.

In November 2024, the Supreme Court refused to grant bail to Delhi riots accused Gulfisha Fatima, but asked the Delhi High Court to hear her bail petition soon. Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Gulfisha, had said that she had been in jail for four years, and her bail petition had been pending in the High Court for a long time.

Earlier, on October 25, 2024, the Supreme Court had given a similar order in the case of another riot accused, Sharjeel Imam.

However, in March 2022 itself, councillor Ishrat Jahan, an accused in the violence, got bail. She was arrested by the Special Cell of Delhi Police under UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act).

The bail petition was filed in the court on behalf of former Congress councilor Ishrat Jahan, which said that the police did not have a single evidence against her.

Earlier, in June 2021, Delhi High Court had granted bail to Pinjra Tod activists Devangana Kalita, Natasha Narwal and Jamia student Asif Iqbal Tanha, who were arrested under UAPA Sections on charges of rioting.

At that time the High Court had said that giving inciting speeches or blocking roads is not unusual when there is widespread opposition to the actions of the government and Parliament. Even if we assume that the alleged inflammatory speeches, ‘chakka jam’, inciting women to protest and other acts, even if these violate the limits of the right to peaceful protest given in the Constitution, the act cannot be termed as a terrorist act, its conspiracy or its preparation.

Alas, Umar Khalid did not get bail or such comments.

Delhi Police’s Special Cell and Crime Branch consider Khalid to be the ‘mastermind’ of the Delhi violence. He has been in jail since September 2020. He has been charged with terrorism, rioting and criminal conspiracy under UAPA. The trial in this case has not started yet.

Umar Khalid’s bail plea has been rejected twice by two different courts, and hearings on his case have been adjourned umpteen times.

Khalid’s bail plea remained pending in the Supreme Court from May 2023 to January 2024, but the debate on it could not be started even once. After this, he withdrew his bail application from the Supreme Court and went back to the trial court.

On February 20, 2025, Khalid’s bail plea was heard in the Delhi High Court. During the hearing, his lawyer told the HC that merely being a member of a WhatsApp group was not evidence of involvement in any crime.

His lawyer Trideep Pais told the court that Khalid had been in custody as an undertrial for a long time. He said that the delay in the trial was also a reason due to which Khalid should get bail. The senior advocate argued that on the basis of equality with the four accused in this case who have been granted bail, Khalid should also be granted bail.

The bench headed by Justice Naveen Chawla has now ordered the next hearing on Khalid’s bail plea on March 4.

So, if we look at how justice has progressed in these five years, it can be said that while one set of accused —  Umar Khalid or Gulfisha or Sharjeel Imam — has not got bail yet, And one of the accused (although Delhi Police does not consider him an accused) Kapil Mishra has become an MLA and the Law and Justice Minister in the Delhi government. Along with this, he has got charge of Development, Art and Culture Department, Language Department, Tourism Department, Labour Department and Employment Department.

The session of the new Delhi Assembly has started. It would be fitting if a report on the progress of investigation in Delhi riots is tabled so that the country knows what the police under Home Minister Amit Shah did for justice in these five years.

(Translated from the original article published on Newsclick’s Hindi website)

Courtesy: Newsclick

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Delhi Police on Trial: Three court orders reveal collusion, cover-ups, and custodial torture by police officers during 2020 Delhi riots https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-police-on-trial-three-court-orders-reveal-collusion-cover-ups-and-custodial-torture-by-police-officers-during-2020-delhi-riots/ Thu, 06 Feb 2025 12:45:32 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=40015 Court rulings reveal selective investigation shielding BJP’s Kapil Mishra, wrongful prosecution of six men based on flimsy evidence, and custodial violence against Muslim detainees—forcing an FIR against a former SHO

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The 2020 Delhi riots were not just a failure of policing but a stark revelation of institutional bias and complicity. The Delhi Police, tasked with maintaining law and order, instead became active participants—turning a blind eye to key instigators, fabricating cases against the vulnerable, and, in some instances, directly engaging in brutality. Three recent court orders lay bare the extent of this misconduct. One case highlights how BJP leader Kapil Mishra, whose incendiary speech is widely believed to have triggered the violence, was shielded from any real investigation. Despite a complaint alleging that Mishra led an armed mob and fired gunshots at protestors, the police’s Action Taken Report (ATR) remained silent on his role, prompting the court to question whether the investigating officer deliberately covered up allegations against him. Another case exposes the police’s flawed approach to prosecutions—where six men accused of rioting were acquitted after the court found that key police witnesses had been examined only months later, their testimonies riddled with inconsistencies. Instead of conducting a fair and timely probe, the police seemed intent on scapegoating individuals while avoiding scrutiny of their own failures.

Perhaps most disturbing is the court’s order directing the registration of an FIR against the former SHO of Jyoti Nagar police station for his alleged role in the custodial torture of riot victims. A widely circulated video had already shown police officers beating Muslim men and forcing them to chant nationalistic and religious slogans, yet no action was taken until judicial intervention. The complainant, Mohd. Wasim, recounted being brutally assaulted, thrown onto a pile of injured men, and later coerced into signing false statements. The court’s findings make it clear that the police did not just fail to protect riot victims; they actively targeted them. These three rulings, taken together, expose a grim reality—law enforcement in Delhi was not just ineffective during the riots, but in many cases, became complicit in deepening the communal divide. While the courts have intervened, these judgments also serve as a reminder of how easily institutions can be weaponised when accountability is absent.

  1. The shielding of BJP MLA Kapil Mishra: Delhi Police’s selective investigation

One of the most critical observations made by the court came in the case involving BJP leader Kapil Mishra, whose incendiary speech on February 23, 2020, is widely believed to have instigated violence in North-East Delhi. The complainant, Mohd. Wasim, alleged that he saw Mishra leading an unlawful assembly and firing gunshots at protestors. However, despite these serious allegations, the police’s Action Taken Report (ATR) was completely silent on Mishra’s role. Through his order issued on January 18, 2025, Judicial Magistrate Udbhav Kumar Jain of the Karkardooma Court pointed out that the investigating officer (IO) had either deliberately avoided probing Mishra’s involvement or actively sought to cover it up. This observation reinforces the perception that Delhi Police has, at times, acted as a shield for politically connected individuals rather than as an impartial law enforcement body.

In the order, the Magistrate observed, “it seems that the IO was more concerned about the police officials and either he failed to make inquiry against the alleged accused no.3 (Kapil Mishra), or he tried to cover up the allegations against the said accused. The ATR is completely silent qua him (Mishra).”

“The principle behind Section 153A IPC is to preserve religious/communal harmony and it is the duty of every citizen that while he enjoys his right to express himself, he preserves religious harmony. This indeed is the positive aspect of Secularism,” the judge said in its order.

The court further stressed that public figures like Mishra bear a higher responsibility to act within the constitutional framework and not make statements that disrupt communal harmony. This order underscores how the police failed in their duty to investigate a politician accused of inciting violence while aggressively pursuing cases against others.

The alleged accused no.3 (Kapil Mishra) is in public eyes and is prone to more scrutiny; such persons in the society direct the course/mood of the public at large and thus, responsible behaviour within the ambit of the Constitution of India is expected from such persons,” the Court said.

The order may be read here.

  1. Dubious prosecutions: Acquittal of Six Accused Due to Flimsy Evidence

In another case, on February 3, 2025, the Additional Sessions Judge Pulastya Pramachala acquitted six individuals accused of being part of a riotous mob that engaged in arson and destruction in Gokalpuri. The court found serious lapses in the prosecution’s case, particularly the unreliable testimonies of two police witnesses, Assistant Sub-Inspectors Vanvir and Jahangir. The officers claimed to have identified the accused in videos but were only examined in December 2020—almost ten months after the riots. The court noted that if the officers had already known the accused, as they claimed, there was no need for them to identify them in videos later. Additionally, one of them failed to even recognise three accused individuals in court.

If they knew the names of the accused persons and if they had seen these persons in the mob of rioters, then there was no need and occasion for them to identify the accused persons in any video,” it said.

This case illustrates how the Delhi Police sought to frame individuals using questionable evidence while failing to investigate more pressing allegations against political figures and police personnel. The delay in examining key witnesses and the lack of credible identification further point to the possibility of wrongful arrests and politically motivated prosecutions.

“This delay in examining these two police officials, who were posted in the same police station, certainly casts doubt over the veracity of the prosecution’s case. The investigating officer did not tender any reason for such delay in recording the statement of these witnesses,” the Court said, as per a report in Bar&Bench.

  1. Police complicity in custodial violence: FIR ordered against former SHO

Perhaps the most egregious case of police misconduct came in the case involving the custodial torture of riot victims, including Faizan, a young Muslim man who later died from his injuries. A widely circulated video from the riots showed Delhi Police personnel beating injured Muslim men and forcing them to sing the national anthem and chant slogans like “Jai Shri Ram” and “Vande Mataram.” The brutality captured in the footage was emblematic of the communal bias and impunity with which certain officers acted during the riots.

The complainant, Mohd. Wasim, provided a chilling account of how he was beaten, thrown onto a pile of other injured victims, and later taken to Jyoti Nagar police station, where the then-SHO and other officers continued to torture them. He was allegedly forced to sign false statements and give misleading accounts to the media under police pressure. Despite such grave allegations, the Delhi Police refused to act until a court intervened. In its order, Magistrate Udbhav Kumar Jain ordered the registration of an FIR against the former SHO under serious charges, including wrongful confinement, criminal intimidation, and deliberate religious insult.

Clearly, the SHO PS Jyoti Nagar, Mr. Tomar (complete name with post not provided) and other unknown police officials engaged themselves in hate crimes against the complainant/victim and they cannot be protected under the garb of sanction as alleged offences committed by them cannot be said to have been committed while acting or purporting to act in the discharge if their official duty,” the Court added, as per Bar&Bench.

Current SHO is directed to depute a responsible officer not below the rank of Inspector to conduct investigation in the present matter and role of other unknown police officials involved in the commission of alleged offences,” added the court.

The court categorically rejected the police’s argument that the accused officers were merely performing their official duties, stating that hate crimes committed by those in uniform cannot be excused under the guise of law enforcement.

“FIR be registered under sections 295-A/323/342/506 IPC against the SHO PS Jyoti Nagar (Mr. Tomar) who was holding the said post in February-March 2020,” the order stated.

This judgment reaffirms the necessity of accountability for custodial violence, particularly in cases where state institutions themselves become perpetrators of communal violence.

The larger picture: A systemic failure

Taken together, these three orders expose a systemic failure in policing during the 2020 Delhi riots. The courts have repeatedly highlighted:

  • Selective investigation: While cases against political figures like Kapil Mishra were ignored, others were prosecuted with flimsy or fabricated evidence.
  • Complicity in violence: Police personnel not only failed to control the riots but, in some instances, actively participated in violence and custodial torture.
  • Bias in legal proceedings: Individuals from marginalised communities were falsely implicated, while officers and politicians aligned with the ruling party enjoyed impunity.

The Delhi Police’s actions—or lack thereof—during and after the riots raise serious concerns about institutional bias and political interference in law enforcement. These court observations serve as a crucial indictment of a law enforcement agency that has repeatedly been accused of favouring one side in communal conflicts. While the judicial interventions are significant, they also expose the limitations of legal remedies in the absence of genuine political will for police accountability and reform.

 

Related:

Brinda Karat on the Third Anniversary of Delhi Riots- “Cannot Abandon Struggle for Justice”

Did Nand Kishore Gurjar admit to role in North East Delhi riots?

Hate speeches amplified by television, incited targeted violence against Muslims: CCR Report, Feb ‘20 Delhi riots

 

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Delhi violence 2020: 4 years on, the shadow of violence lives on https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-violence-2020-4-years-on-the-shadow-of-violence-lives-on/ Thu, 07 Mar 2024 05:13:17 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=33662 It has been 4 years since the north east Delhi communal violence took place. However, the court case has seen a rocky road with several acquittals, with the court rapping the Delhi police for “shoddy investigation”, amidst all of this, the casualty continue to be the survivors of the violence.

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In 2020, just before the pandemic struck, north eastern parts of the nation’s capital were struck with communal violence. Even four years after the incident, which took place from February 23rd to February 27 in the bustling capital of India, Delhi, as the general assembly Lok Sabha elections approach this year, the reports have arrived that the Delhi Police fears violence ahead of the elections. Hindustan Times reported that the police has been given an advisory and it has now decided to keep ‘an eye out for’ protestors who had taken part in the 2020 anti-CAA movement and to keep vigilant in ‘communally sensitive’ zones of the city. The police have thus been reportedly advised to take preventive steps.

The Delhi violence case however has progressed slowly after the series of violent incidents which saw over 50 people dead, 38 Muslims and 15 Hindus, and 700 injured. A committee, formed by the Delhi Minorities Commission in the aftermath of the violence noted that over the next three days in February 2020 mobs spread across the district in Delhi targeting Muslims.

According to a report by The Print, 183 individuals have been acquitted, and 75 have been discharged in 757 registered cases in connection with the violence. The case has seen many twists and turns. In November 2023, a court acquitted 7 people after the prosecution reportedly failed to prove that these people were part of a violent mob. Despite the evidence of video recording, the video recording was not admissible as evidence according to the court because it was examined to check for manipulation. In another instance, a court remarked on the Delhi police’s investigation as a ‘shoddy probe’, and slammed them for manipulating evidence without conducting real investigation. Similarly, in June 2023, The Hindu reported that the Karkardooma Courts had acquitted four Muslim men within a span of nine days the In two separate cases related to the 2020 Delhi riots stated that there was a lack of evidence against them. In October 2023 according to The Hindu, once again the court directed the Police Commissioner to start an inquiry into the conduct of the Investigating Officer (IO) who had drafted the charge sheet the court said was only relying on ‘hearsay evidence.’ Additional Sessions Judge Pulastya Pramachala stated that, “Regrettably, previous IOs have caused significant delays for this court by submitting investigation reports founded on hearsay evidence.”

In recent news from January last month, the Special Public Prosecutor Amit Prasad is one of the special prosecutors who represents Delhi Police in the 2020 northeast Delhi riots cases, took back his resignation after he tendered it on December 15, 2023.

A report from 2020 by The Wire reported on the case as the Delhi police tried to prove its claim that the Delhi riots were a conspiracy organised by anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protesters. The Delhi police had reportedly accused several prominent figures including Sitaram Yechury, the general secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), world renowned economist Jayati Ghosh, Delhi University professor and public intellectual Apoorvanand as well as others. The essay also argues that the Delhi police seem to be trying to ‘intensifying target of its critics’ by implying that figures like Yechury and Ghosh were also part of the conspiracy.

Furthermore, in another twist in 2023, as per a report by India Today, speaking at a public event in Bengaluru, Justice S. Muralidhar, the former Chief Justice of the Orissa High Court, stated that he was confused about the central government’s reaction to his verdict in the Delhi riots case. In February 2020, Justice Muralidhar had presided over three urgent sittings addressing pleas regarding police inaction during the Delhi riots and had issued an order instructing the Delhi Police to ensure the safety and treatment of riot victims after an emergency midnight hearing was called at his home. Furthermore, he had directed the government to provide temporary shelter, treatment, and counselling for those displaced by the riots. However, this proved to be his final say in the matter as reports state that immediately after this order, the government transferred Justice Muralidhar to the Punjab and Haryana High Court, according to India Today.

However, despite the trajectory of the court cases, the lives of the victims remain affected unchangeably by the violence. As part of the government’s formulated scheme to compensate victims of the riots, people who had experience the death of their kin would receive Rs. 10 lakhs.

The government has compensated the kin of the 53 people who lost their lives, according to a report by Frontline Magazine, however people still live in the shadow of the violence. The Frontline reported the story of Shabnam, a 30-year-old resident of Khajuri Khas. Her husband, Mohammad Amjad used to operate a mobile repair shop from their home which was destroyed when a mob set their house on fire. The couple is currently still grappling with the ongoing financial setback and losses they faced after the violence.

Shabnam shared to Frontline, “My husband, even though he never shows it, is very stressed. He has changed as a person since the violence. Our house was burnt, and we had to spend multiple days confined in a cramped room in a nearby house with over 50 people. We had to take extreme measures, like throwing our own children from one terrace to another, just to ensure their safety.”

Several activists and students were arrested in relation to the violence. These accused people are charged under various sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860, and the often termed draconian Unlawful, Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), 1967. Currently, six of them have been granted bail, while the remaining continue to endure imprisonment. Several of these originally incarcerated have been granted bail, one of which is one Mohammed Faizan Khan, a mobile seller who was granted bail four months later, and then Safoora Zargar, a student activist from Jamia Millia Islamia was given bail due to her six-month pregnancy. Ishrat Jahan, a former Congress councillor and advocate, was also granted bail by a session’s court. In June 2021, the Delhi High Court granted bail to activists Devangana Kalita, Natasha Narwal, and Asif Iqbal Tanha citing lack of evidence in June 2021. The judgement in Asif Tanha’s case was a lead judgement, path-breaking in the manner in which it examined the “offences” under the UAPA.

Some of the names, who continue to be incarcerated as undertrial detainees in the case include Khalid Saifi, a 42-year-old member of the Delhi-based United Against Hate organisation, Umar Khalid a student leader and activist, Sharjeel Imam, a PhD scholar from Bihar, Meeran Haider, a student leader associated within the Rashtriya Janata Dal Youth Wing, and student activist Gulfisha Fatima. Along with these there are Tasleem Ahmed, an education consultant, Athar Khan, a former employee of a Delhi-based telecom company.

Meenakshi Ganguly, who is the South Asia director of Human Rights Watch has said in connection to the case, “Indian authorities have been targeting activists for harassment and arrest instead of impartially investigating allegations that BJP leaders incited violence and police officials were complicit in attacks.”

During a gathering in 2022, UN Special Rapporteur of Human Rights Defenders (HRD), Mary Lawlor too voiced concerns on the arrest, and has stated that the Indian government is trying to criminalise human rights defenders by charging them under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).

According to Amnesty International, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) is frequently used by the government as a means to put aside human rights and suppress dissent.

According to Al Jazeera, the law was originally introduced in 2008 by the Congress party and there onwards it underwent several changes in 2019 under the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. These changes give the authorities more power to label people and not just organisations as terrorists. While the UAPA has been used by many Indian governments, its usage has exponentially risen in recent years.

In 2020, the conviction rate under the UAPA stood at 2% as government data shows that out of the 5,922 people arrested under the law from 2016 to 2019, only 132 resulted in convictions. Thus, critics argue that the law functions more as an easy tool of harassment, allowing the government to intimidate, imprison, and target individuals critical of its policies. The deliberate slow duration in the investigative processes and the highly strict bail provisions within the UAPA contribute to lengthened detention, and provide a welcome environment for unlawful confinement and often, even torture.

 

Related:

Brinda Karat on the Third Anniversary of Delhi Riots- “Cannot Abandon Struggle for Justice”

Did Nand Kishore Gurjar admit to role in North East Delhi riots?

Hate speeches amplified by television, incited targeted violence against Muslims: CCR Report, Feb ‘20 Delhi riots

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Delhi Riots 2020: Umar Khalid withdraws plea from Supreme Court citing “change in circumstances” https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-riots-2020-umar-khalid-withdraws-plea-from-supreme-court-citing-change-in-circumstances/ Wed, 14 Feb 2024 08:12:00 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=33139 The bench led by Bela Trivedi dismissed Khalid’s as withdrawn, allowed for fresh filing for bail before the trial court

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On February 14, as eyes were on the bail application of activist Umar Khalid that was once again listed before the Supreme Court bench of Justice Bela Trivedi and Pankaj Mithal, Senior Advocate Kapil Sibal informed the court that their petition is being withdrawn from the court in view of “change in circumstances”. It is essential to note that Khalid’s bail petition had been adjourned by the court 14 times. In the past and many had pointed fingers at the Master of the Roster for withdrawing his bail petition from senior judges and shifting it before Trivedi’s bench, who is a relatively junior judge, in contravention to the guidelines of the Supreme Court.

As per a report in LiveLaw, the Supreme Court dismissed as withdrawn the bail petition filed by the JNU scholar in connection with the Delhi riots larger conspiracy case. Senior Advocate Kapil Sibal, for Khalid, submitted that the petition is being withdrawn in view of “change in circumstances” and sought to file the bail afresh before the trial court.

“Bail matter we wish to withdraw. There has been a change in circumstances, we will try our luck in the trial court, ” Sibal stated before the bench, as per LiveLaw.

It is essential to note that Sibal clarified he will continue to argue upon the separate writ petition filed by Khalid challenging the constitutionality of the provisions of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Notably, Khalid has been in custody since September 2020 and he was denied bail by a Delhi High court bench of Justice Siddharth Mridul and Justice Rajnish Bhatnagar on October 18, 2022. Under UAPA, Khalid has been charged under sections 13 (Punishment for unlawful activities), 16 (Punishment for terrorist act), 17 (Punishment for raising funds for terrorist act) and 18 (Punishment for conspiracy).

Brief Background of the case against Umar Khalid

Khalid’s appeal against the trial court’s decision to deny him bail in the case was rejected by a division bench of Justice Siddharth Mridul and Justice Rajnish Bhatnagar after have reserved their decision on September 9, 2022. Rejecting his application, the bench has stated while pronouncing the court order, “We don’t find any merit in the bail appeal. The bail appeal is dismissed,”

The High Court bench stated that there is “prima facie case” established against Umar Khalid in regards to the role played by him during the riots, chakka jaam and destruction of public property. The court order stated, “The protest planned was “not a typical protest” normal in political culture or democracy but one far more destructive and injurious geared towards extremely grave consequences. Thus, as per the pre-meditated plan there was an intentional blocking of roads to cause inconvenience and disruption of the essential services to the life of community residing in North-East Delhi, creating thereby panic and an alarming sense of insecurity. The attack on police personnel by women protesters in front only followed by other ordinary people and engulfing the area into a riot is the epitome of such pre-mediated plan and as such the same would prima facie be covered by the definition of ‘terrorist act’.”

Notably, Justice Siddharth Mridul had granted bail to Asif Tanha, Natasha Narwal and Devangana Kalitha.

Khalid has been hounded by the regime for years. His arrest in September 2020 was based on the charge of larger conspiracy to allegedly unleash violence to defame the Indian government during a visit by former US President Donald Trump. Many have fallen victim to this draconian statute which is being regularly abused often to incarcerate politically inconvenient voices, more specially so by the executive in the past 9 years. While Khalid had been was granted bail in the matter concerning Penal Code and Arms Act charges, he continues to remain in custody in connection with the Delhi Riots larger ‘conspiracy case’ concerning UAPA charges under FIR No. 59 of 2020. While granting bail concerning the IPC & Arms Act charges, the Additional Sessions Judge Vinod Yadav had recognised that probability of a lengthy trial in the said matter. Importantly, the court had also noted that the material against Khalid was “sketchy” and that he cannot be incarcerated indefinitely on the basis of such evidence.

 

Related:

When speeches are given a criminal colour & ‘conspiracy’ charges used to incarcerate: Gautam Bhatia on Umar Khalid, Jyoti Jagtap bail orders

Umar Khalid’s Battle against the UAPA Charges to Continue

Umar Khalid’s incarceration: USCIRF Commissioner expresses concern over use of anti-terrorism laws to silence activists

2023: India’s Bad Laws, what a weaponised state means for individual freedoms and indigenous rights

Bail not Jail, India’s constitutional courts’ bumpy ride towards personal liberty

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Delhi violence hate platforms? TV channels ‘incited’ communal strife, alleges report https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-violence-hate-platforms-tv-channels-incited-communal-strife-alleges-report/ Thu, 17 Nov 2022 07:45:36 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2022/11/17/delhi-violence-hate-platforms-tv-channels-incited-communal-strife-alleges-report/ Claiming that there has been “no comprehensive analysis of media reporting and commentary” on the “developments” following the passage of the Citizens Amendment Act (CAA), and the February 2020 communal violence” in Delhi, a recent report, in an analysis of debates aired on the six most watched news channels from December 2019 to February 2020, […]

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Hindu

Claiming that there has been “no comprehensive analysis of media reporting and commentary” on the “developments” following the passage of the Citizens Amendment Act (CAA), and the February 2020 communal violence” in Delhi, a recent report, in an analysis of debates aired on the six most watched news channels from December 2019 to February 2020, has said there was “a similarity in rhetoric, positioning and language” to air “prejudice and suspicion against the Muslim community.”

There was a concerted attempt on the part of these channels — Republic TV and Times Now which are English channels, and Aaj Tak, Zee News, India TV, and Republic Bharat — to frame the issues around the CAA as Hindus versus Muslims with Muslims being portrayed as “troublemakers” or “ungrateful citizens”, or people whose actions were “antithetical to national interest”, the report, titled “Troubling Dualities: News Media as Arbiter of Fact or Platform of Hate?”, alleges.

Forming part of a larger study, “Uncertain Justice: A Citizens Committee Report on the North East Delhi Violence 2020”, the report, based on viewing 326 episodes on these channels running for 243 hours — accessed through their websites or social media accounts – accuses them of using “sensationalist tickers, hashtags and headlines flashed across TV screens” during their primetime shows.

Published by the advocacy group Constitutional Conduct Group (CCG), which consists of former civil servants, the authors of the study are: Justice Madan B Lokur, former Judge of the Supreme Court; Justice AP Shah, former Chief Justice of the Madras and Delhi High Courts; Justice R.S. Sodhi, former Judge of the Delhi High Court; Justice Anjana Prakash, former Judge of the Patna High Court; and GK Pillai, IAS (Retd.), former Home Secretary, Government of India.
Pointing towards how these channels sought to project the December 2019 nationwide protests against CAA as “singularly disruptive and violent”, the report says, they “uniformly” and “repeatedly” called anti-CAA protesters “vandals”, “rioters”, “potential terrorists”, “anti-national”, “tukde-tukde gang”, “victimizers”, “cowards”, “blackmailers” and “dangerous”.

Thus, according to the report, an episode of Republic TV’s primetime show, aired on December 16, 2019, was punctuated with flashing text, such as “Using rights excuse for riots?”, and ran the hashtag, #RightsNotRiots. “In the episode, the anchor repeatedly called protesters potential terrorists trying to incite communal violence”, the report notes.

And when on December 17, violent clashes broke out between the police and protesters in Delhi’s Seelampur-Jaffrabad area in the daytime, the report says, India TV’s primetime show posed a series of rhetorical questions: “Who set Delhi on fire?, Who burnt down Delhi?”

The show, the report says, displayed such flashing texts: 210 minutes of riots in Jaffrabad, 100% complete picture; who has spread Modi phobia in Delhi’s Muslims?; and direct guerilla war against PM Modi). On December 18, DNA (Zee News) claimed that the protests against the CAA are a larger conspiracy to spread communal riots with the help of social media tools, which were referred to as “Digital Danga”, even as the anchor termed the protesters as “Urban Naxals”.

And, the Republic Bharat on December 27, 2019, basing on “uncorroborated visuals and WhatsApp messages”, said there were calls to start jihad after meeting at India Gate with hockey sticks and baseball bats, attack the police and be prepared for becoming martyrs. However, there was “no description of the origins or authenticity of the WhatsApp message”, the report comments.

In January-February 2020, the Shaheen Bagh protests were sought to be “vilified by these channels”, the report says, stating, on January 27, 2020, an episode of DNA (Zee News) wondered, “Are we going to now need visa for entering Shaheen Bagh?”, with the accompanying hashtag #370InShaheenBagh. It says, “In the show, the anchor compared Shaheen Bagh to conflict sites like Kashmir and Syria in an attempt to characterize the protest site as violent and aggressive.”

On the next day (January 28, 2020), the telecast ran with the text “Shaheen Bagh should now get emptied”, and the hashtag was #LekarRahengeShaheenBagh (We will take over Shaheen Bagh). The anchor asked the audience: “Can’t all of us together free Shaheen Bagh from the tukde-tukde gang?”, stating the protesters were speaking the same language as in Pakistan or Kashmir.

Underling that news channels uncritically accepted “inciting comments made by panelists invited for discussions”, the report gives the example of how, on January 28, 2020, in an episode of Aaj Tak, the anchor praised provocative statements made by a BJP representative who quoted an unsubstantiated Imam order “to break the country” and “connect fire he with jihad”.

Then, on February 24, 2020, on a Republic TV host accused anti-CAA protesters of killing head constable, Ratan Lal, who died amidst mob violence. The report comments, “The exact circumstances of his killing remain under investigation to date, and certainly were not known on February 24.” Yet it featured flashing text such as, “Rioters kill police constable” followed by, “They have blood on their hands”.

Thus, DNA (Zee News) on December 26 said, “DNA test of expert stone pelters from Kashmir have reached UP”, claiming, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI), the Popular Front of India (PFI) and “expert stone pelting groups from Kashmir” were funding and training anti-CAA protesters for violence.

Then, the report says, India TV on January 3, 2020 portrayed Muslims, including a prominent politician, as colluding with the protesters for violence at local levels through the cover of mosques and the protests. The episode flashed the text, “Remove CAA and say La Ilaha Illlahah. Listen to each slogan and listen to the meaning of the protesters.” The show’s anchor posed the question, “How do Modi’s enemies give tuitions to Muslims?”, asking audience to pay close attention to the slogans which tell the protesters that “their religion is under threat.”

The episode, says the report, continued, “In the name of saving one’s religion, Muslim youth are being provoked and influenced into accepting the path of jihad.” It predicted, “A rally against the CAA would definitely be taken out after jummah prayer.” The report comments, “By casting protest as akin to notions of religious warfare, the show’s anchor seemed intent on creating a fear psychosis in the minds of non-Muslims.”

The anchor “repeatedly insinuated that the killing of Ratan Lal and acts of violence were deliberately being done to coincide with the official visit of then American President Donald Trump, which took place on February 25”,the report says. On the same day, Zee News said that “a conspiracy was in play with the prime intent of maligning India before the international world during President Trump’s visit”, claiming the “tukde-tukde gang and opposition parties were behind this.”

There was a similarity in rhetoric, positioning and language to air prejudice and suspicion against the Muslim community

Then, says the report, on February 25, 2020, Republic Bharat pushed the narrative that the protesters were in fact rioters by stating, “These people who are talking about CAA, they are rioters, they don’t know anything about the CAA, NRC.” And, the Republic TV made the remark, “The Nanis and Dadis (grandmothers) of Shaheen Bagh are basically jihadi elements sitting and inciting a violent mob here.”

The report notes, “An important strand of the vilifying narrative used by these channels was to show anti-CAA protests being imbued with designs of Muslim extremism, backed by Islamic extremist groups. The language of attacking Hindus, of waging jihad, was used to embed the Hindu-Muslim binary with Muslims as aggressors.”

Then, says the report, on January 16, 2020, Republic TV, focusing on the central question, “Is Shaheen Bagh a paid protest?” with the hashtag #ProtestOnHire, said, “This is the attempt of Islamic radicalization that is going on in Shaheen Bagh. Shaheen Bagh is not a people’s protest. It is political plus it is an attempt at Islamic radicalization. It is an attempt at religious polarization.”

The TV continued, “If you want to protest, go to Jantar Mantar. Why do you have to be in a Muslim majority area in Delhi? This has to stop at some point of time. The whole country is fed up with this Shaheen Bagh rubbish. This McDonaldization of the protest movement… Start a Shaheen Bagh franchise. You have some free time, start a Shaheen Bagh in Pune, start a Shaheen Bagh in Kolkata, start a Shaheen Bagh in Bengaluru. But it’s now going strongly against national interest.”

On January 17, 2020, the report says, the debate aired with the title, “Shaheen Bagh campaign: Call off ‘political protests’”, with a hashtag #ShaheenBaghSham, with the anchor stating, “This group wants bloodshed. Thousands of Rohingya refugees are living in camps in and around Kalindi Kunj and Shaheen Bagh…You’re bringing infiltrators into the protest, foreigners, threats to internal security are being provoked out there. Small children are being told that their entire life’s purpose should be to assassinate Narendra Modi and Amit Shah.”

On January 27, 2020, the report continues, in an episode of Republic TV titled “12 tapes expose ‘Break India’ conspiracy”, which ran with the hashtag #UniteForIndia, the anchor opened the show with, “Ladies and gentlemen, first of all, thank you for your support for the unite for India campaign, our campaign against the Muslim supremacist Islamic radicals who are trying to create a Shaheen Bagh experiment everywhere in India. And we must call them out as Muslim supremacists because their philosophy is Muslims for Muslims.”

The report underlines, “These channels framed the protest movement as a homegrown conspiracy with violent motives, hatched either by the opposition, or by international actors. Within this, there was also an attempt to frame the protests as anti-Modi as a conspiracy aimed to discredit the Prime Minister and exaggerate the dangers posed by the CAA-NRC.”

Thus, on December 19, 2019, an episode on India TV was titled as, “Modi’s enemy, the riot brigade…There is politics beyond fear.” And on January 3, 2020, in an episode, Republic Bharat stated that Pakistanis and Bangladeshis were part of those inciting violence “without any evidence to back this claim.” And on January 4, 2020, the Times Now episode titled “Are the CAA Protests an anti-Modi Conspiracy to Mislead Muslims?” ran with the hashtag #CAAAntiModiConspiracy.

On January 15, 2020, an episode of Republic TV was aired with the title “Congress-Pakistan hold CAA meet in Lahore?” and the hashtag #LahoreConspiracy. Printed text on the screen read, “Lahore to Shaheen Bagh via ISI?”. During the show, the anchor stated: “Please understand the dangerous mind that is planning this… They want to create a Shaheen Bagh political business model supported by the Pakistanis.”

Pointing out that from about mid-January 2020, the TV channels started giving calls for the closure of the Shaheen Bagh protest, the report says, “Following a protest by residents of Sarita Vihar in Delhi demanding the removal of police barricades in their neighborhood (ostensibly placed because of the neighbouring sit-in protests), an episode of Republic TV of January 21, 2020 whipped up a Hindu-Muslim narrative between Sarita Vihar and Shaheen Bagh, casting Shaheen Bagh as anti-Hindu.”

Thus, says the report, the anchor made the remarks: “Not far from Shaheen Bagh in Delhi is a colony called Sarita Vihar. Sarita Vihar is large residential colony whose hardworking tax-paying citizens have had their lives turned upside down for over a month. The children in Sarita Vihar have been terrorized and traumatized by the violent protests unending at Shaheen Bagh. All the roads are blocked all the time by the politicians and violent protesters at Shaheen Bagh.”

The anchor continued, “Anti-nationals and members of the tukde-tukde gang mock these people of Sarita Vihar, they laugh at them, and one of them said today on Twitter that till 370 is not brought back in Kashmir, the people of Sarita Vihar and other parts of Delhi must be prepared to pay and must be prepared to suffer. Shaheen Bagh, which is a useful epicenter of an anti-Hindu, anti-India, money guzzling, opportunistic and entirely political movement.”
On February 17, 2020, the report quotes Republic Bharat anchor making the remark, “The people of this country are against Shaheen Bagh…You’ll have to stop the protests or else you’ll be uprooted…Until there are riots, these people won’t shut up, we will not let riots take place.”he added, “Hindus are being provoked on account of Shaheen Bagh.” A panelist on the show was allowed to make the provocative remark, “Only Muslims cause riots in the country” and “Rioters should be shot.”

Courtesy: https://www.counterview.net

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Delhi HC grants bail to 4 accused in the 2020 violence https://sabrangindia.in/delhi-hc-grants-bail-4-accused-2020-violence/ Wed, 17 Mar 2021 07:19:53 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/03/17/delhi-hc-grants-bail-4-accused-2020-violence/ Justice Kait slammed the police constable for not making a DD entry or calling a PCR van during the violence 

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Delhi violence

The Delhi High Court has granted bail to four accused- Liyakat Ali, Arshad Qayyum, Gulfam and Irshad Ahmad in the North East Delhi violence of last year in February.

Justice Suresh Kumar Kait observed, “Prima facie I am of the opinion that petitioners cannot be made to languish behind bars for a longer time and the veracity of allegations levelled against them can be tested during trial.”

All four accused persons have been charged-sheeted for offences under sections 109 (abetment to crime), 147 (rioting) 148 (rioting, armed with deadly weapon) 149 (unlawful assembly) 153A (promoting enmity between groups) 323 (voluntarily causing hurt) 392 (robbery) 395 (punishment for dacoity) 427 (mischief) 436 (mischief by fire and explosive substance), 505 (inciting people) 120B (criminal conspiracy) 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code and punishment for using arms under the Arms Act.

Justice Kait noted that although the communal clash broke out on February 24, the FIR in question was registered only on February 27. The court noted another slip up and said, “The testimony of eyewitnesses, namely, Pradeep Verma, Surender Singh and Rajbir Singh Yadav under Section 161 Cr.PC. has been recorded on 14.03.2020 (March 14) and none of them neither made any PCR call nor any DD entry was made.”

Further, the Bench pulled up the police constable for not calling a PCR van and make a DD entry. ‘The statement of another eyewitness Constable Sangram was recorded on 23.04.2020 and this Court fails to understand as to why despite having a good understanding of law and order, a police official who is witness to riots would neither call PCR nor will make a DD entry in this regard”, the Bench said.

The Single-judge Bench noted that the call detail record of the prime accused Tahir Hussain, does not match with those of the four petitioners. There was also no evidence against the petitioners “such like CCTV footage, video clip or photo to connect the petitioners with the incident in question and nothing incriminating has been recovered from their possession.”

It, thus, ordered the release of the accused on bail forthwith upon their furnishing of personal bond of Rs.20,000 each, with one surety each in the like amount.

The judgment may be read here: 

 

Related:

Revisiting Northeast Delhi a year after the February 2020 pogrom

Delhi HC seeks response in plea seeking quashing of DMC’s report on Delhi riots

Delhi Riots: Bail denied as accused carrying palta in aggressive posture

Delhi court asks Police to respond to plea seeking FIR against Kapil Mishra

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Revisiting Northeast Delhi a year after the February 2020 pogrom https://sabrangindia.in/revisiting-northeast-delhi-year-after-february-2020-pogrom/ Thu, 25 Feb 2021 10:43:27 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/02/25/revisiting-northeast-delhi-year-after-february-2020-pogrom/ Senior activists, lawyers and experts working on-ground with Delhi pogrom survivors discuss with SabrangIndia the progress, or the lack of it, in the case of communal attacks in Northeast Delhi

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Delhi violence

People from varying sections of society must mobilise to hold both the central and Delhi government responsible for the ordeals of February 2020 riot survivors from Northeast Delhi, said a diverse panel of speakers during a virtual conference titled Delhi Carnage: One Year Later organised by SabrangIndia. The discussion was held to mark the first anniversary of the brute violence.

Supreme Court Senior Counsel C. U. Singh, Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) Polit Bureau member Brinda Karat, social activist Aasif Mujtaba and renowned journalist Teesta Setalvad discussed on February 24, 2021 the legal and overall accountability of the State, the judicial response to the incident, reparation and compensation provided to survivors.

Singh, who independently released a fact-finding report, collating all the available and published data around the Delhi pogrom, said there were aspects of the judicial response that were seriously disappointing, particularly the attempt to create a mythical conspiracy and to make one central FIR – number 59 – into a “conspiracy FIR”. He said the administration reverse engineered by working backwards from a pre-conceived concept that pogrom victims planned and perpetrated the attack on themselves and suffered huge fatalities, injuries and horrific loss of property.

“It’s a real Alice in Wonderland situation where everything is exactly the reverse of what it was,” said Singh.

He expressed disappointment that the judiciary has been compliant and very hands-off on the whole thing, despite seeing this unfold right from the start. He pointed out that even a year after the incident, people continue to get roped in, arrested and then ultimately get bail due to complete lack of evidence, long after severe punishment. Ordinary bail orders have just begun to get passed amounting to a serious breach of personal liberties.

However, he said there are rays of hope from every now and then when magistrates and session courts do “remarkable work in individual bail cases.” Further, he advocated the use of civil reparation through civil suits against the powerful perpetrators and guilty policemen, that should run parallel with criminal cases.

Similarly, Ms Karat talked about total State culpability while focusing on three aspects: role of Delhi police and the Home Ministry, the dismissal of evidence and the delay in court hearings.

“The Delhi police and the Home Ministry were complicit in allowing a lot of the violence. There was a deliberate delay or lacunae in police deployment. The fact that decisions were taken or deliberately delayed, for example the imposition of curfew, and Section 144 is stark. Besides the content of the infamous chargesheet in FIR 59 is shocking,” she said.

She stressed that the local police received over 13,000 distress calls from citizens but officials simply did not answer any of them. Obviously, they were instructions not to, as these are elementary standard operating procedures. The Police said, in their defence that they could not respond because they were overstretched. At the same time, their data shows “it was a deliberate ploy” said Karat.

Aasif Mujtaba, an engineering graduate from IIT closely involved in the relief and rehabilitation was one of the speakers. He felt both, anguished and bitter. He sharply addressed the question on nomenclature and demanded that the attack be referred to as a “pogrom” and not a “riot”.

“We should start calling it a full-scale pogrom,” he said referring to data from February 23, 2020 to February 24, 2020.

Having been present in the area on February 25, he recounted moments when Muslim men said they were forced to take off their pants off to prove they were Muslims. Many people were driven out of their homes while as many as 19 places of Muslim worship were damaged.

A boy living in the area gave Mujtaba a recording of him calling the local SHO a Karawalnagar who told him, “You wanted azadi? This is the azadi we are giving to you.” Further, the activist talked about videos where police were seen participating in the violence.

Brinda Karat has taken several steps in connection with the hate speech, build-up and police manipulation of the charge sheet related to the Delhi pogrom. This has ensured that official date has become available through the police affidavits filed in response. Ms Karat has filed a petition in the Delhi High Court, praying for directions for the implementation of Section 141 of the CrPC asking for details of those people arrested and regarding the role of police. By July-end, she received an answer that the court has not found any evidence to substantiate the claim that police were in collusion with the violence against minority communities. This, despite the fact that Karat talked of videos and other evidence that was not heard in court.

Ms Karat had also approached the police and magistracy for filing an FIR under section 153 of the CrPC on the hateful and inciteful speech of Kapil Mishra, Anurag Thakur and Parvesh Verma, all office bearers and even ministers in the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Though first such steps were taken in January 2020, there has been a tardy and delayed response a year later. “It is his delay, deliberate delay that is shocking,” Karat asserted.

 “There is a total subversion of justice. State culpability is being concealed by the fact that the government is confident that they are not answerable even to the courts of India,” she said. She has also called for an independent judicial commission inquiry into the attack. “Investigations have been delayed because all available evidence shows the political agenda of the ruling dispensation at play,” said Karat.

Drawing parallels between the Delhi 2020 pogrom and Gujarat 2002 pogrom, Teesta Setalvad referred to a part of Karat’s report that said junior intelligence officers wrote to higher echelons about the build-up to a communal atmosphere and asked for more personnel to maintain control. However, higher officials did not respond, which is what happened in Gujarat as well.

Aasif Mujtaba concurred asking, “In entirety the police were complicit with riots. So, a big question that comes to mind is who are we to call on when the police kill?”

Regarding casualties, he said that 39 out of 54 deaths were of Muslims while there are only two reported deaths of Hindus. More than 90 percent property that was damaged belonged to Muslims. Nearly 50 percent of people arrested were Muslims while of the 755 cases, police investigation is pending for 400 cases.

“Even when it comes to investigation, police are doing it with a biased mindset,” he said.

In turn, Singh said that the only way to expose this theory, is to test it on prima facie basis and then expedite the trial. This is why investigations are not being completed, he said.

“If you start with a premise that riots were a culmination of anti-CAA riots… then suddenly there is a reverse burden on victims to prove they were not a part of this conspiracy. All reports need to be collated and see if there is an overall pic that emerges,” he said.

Singh said that if the judiciary cares at all for this huge chunk of society, it will expedite trials to dismiss conspiracy theories against victims.

To this, Setalvad added that there is also a need for special prosecutors of higher integrity and calibre and a monitoring of cases by the constitutional courts.

Meanwhile, Karat stated that on top of silencing victims and selectively omitting statements that named BJP members, it was the Delhi AAP government had provided a pathetic rehabilitation package for residents.

“Rehabilitation is a sham. Widows say they want to earn their livelihood. The central government is not in the least involved in a single rehabilitation. The rehabilitation money is totally inadequate,” said Karat.

Adding to this, Singh said that compensation is given for the tragedy victims suffer, and should not be given on an earning capacity basis.

According to Mujtaba, all victims were to be given Rs. 10 lakh. However, he said that the government’s intention was to simply provide money rather than to honour people’s dignity. The money people received in-hand was far too little to deal with economic and health problems.

Convent schools in the area were at full capacity and private schools said they could not afford to lower fees following the coronavirus lockdown.

“Did Delhi government or the Centre bother to talk to these kids? The government never had intention to safeguard these people. Last year, a man at Jafrabad asked for my help to find his family. It took us six hours to get help from a single officer,” said Mujtaba.

Regarding administrative silence, Setalvad said that even the National Human Rights Commission panel remains silent on the issue of rehabilitation.

Similarly, Karat said that the question of relief is important to constantly make governments accountable. For example, Mohammed Waqeel, a man blinded by an acid attack last year was not included in the permanently disabled list of the AAP government, thus disallowing him due compensation. Further, a second survey showed that children of the affected area required financial help to get back in schools.

“People [residents of Northeast Delhi] keep on saying that they never had to face this communal hatred and this hate is manufactured,” said Karat.

Even today, police have to be called repeatedly to prevent hate-elements using premises of religious places of worship like the existing Hanuman mandirs in the area yelling provocative comments and inciting violence. Asif mentioned an instance that took place on February 23, 2021, where a section of the local people were talking about holding a ‘Vijay Diwas’ (Victory Day) on the occasion of the one-year anniversary.

“This is an example of a horrific assault on the Constitution of India… It has shown us a mirror of the future… If we don’t come together today for the issues of Northeast Delhi, I don’t know if we’ll be around tomorrow when the rest of India has to face this. This is an urgent battle. We need a bigger effort,” said Karat.

Setalvad concluded the event by remembering the many people from the Muslim community, who incarcerated under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) for standing up for their community: Umar Khalid, Gulfishan, Ishrat Jahan and others.

“This is like turning narrative on its head. To use UAPA at a time like this and to construct a conspiracy is very unfortunate because December 2019 and January 2020 was rife with politics of protest and love in the streets inspired by Shaheen Bagh in Delhi. And then we had to battle the politics of hate,” she said.

Related:

Delhi HC seeks response in plea seeking quashing of DMC’s report on Delhi riots

Truth has been hijacked to serve political interests: Brinda Karat on Delhi violence

Delhi violence: Government pays compensation to over 2,000 affected

I have no regrets, if need be, I’d do it again: Kapil Mishra

 

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