Showing posts with label 2002 communal riots in Gujarat -India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2002 communal riots in Gujarat -India. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2016

24 Convicted in Massacre of Muslims During Gujarat Riots in India By ELLEN BARRY- The New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/03/world/asia/gujarat-riots-massacre-india-verdict.html?emc=edit_tnt_20160602&nlid=28904237&tntemail0=y&_r=0

The New York Times

24 Convicted in Massacre of Muslims During Gujarat Riots in India


By ELLEN BARRYJUNE 2, 2016


Vehicles on fire in Ahmedabad, India, on Feb. 28, 2002, the day 69 Muslims, mostly women and children, died in a compound set ablaze by thousands of Hindu men armed with stones, iron rods and bombs.CreditManish Swarup/Associated Press

NEW DELHI — Twenty-four people were found guilty on Thursday of massacring Muslims during the 2002 religious riots that tore through Gujarat, a state then led by Narendra Modi, who is now India’s prime minister.
A judge in Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s largest city, acquitted 36 people for lack of evidence, including a police inspector and a midranking official in the Bharatiya Janata Party, led by Mr. Modi.
The verdict, the latest in more than a dozen prosecutions arising from the riots, did not implicate officials who were working under Mr. Modi’s authority at the time, or indeed any prominent leaders. But it was a reminder of a bloody episode that the prime minister has taken great pains to put behind him. On trips abroad, including one to the United States next week, Mr. Modi will probably face more questions about communal violence and the far-right agenda advanced by some in his party.
Two more cases stemming from the Gujarat riots, in which about 1,000 people were killed over the course of two months, are still pending. One of those cases, brought by the widow of Ehsan Jafri, a former member of Parliament killed in the attacks, seeks to establish that the riots were the result of a high-level conspiracy involving Mr. Modi.
The case Thursday involved the attack in which Mr. Jafri was killed, on Feb. 28, 2002, one of the worst episodes of the Gujarat riots. A crowd of Muslims, mostly women and children, had taken shelter in a compound in Ahmedabad from a mob of thousands of Hindu men armed with stones, iron rods and bombs.
Witnesses said that for hours, Mr. Jafri, who lived in the compound, made frantic calls to city officials asking for police protection. But the compound was already on fire when the police arrived in force, and the people inside died of burns and smoke inhalation. Sixty-nine people died.

KEY FACTS

  • 24 people were found guilty of massacring Muslims ​in one of the worst episodes of the riots in Gujarat in 2002. 36 people were acquitted for lack of evidence.
  • 69 people died in the episode. About 1,000 people were killed overall in the riots.
  • Gujarat’s chief minister at the time was Narendra Modi, India’s current prime minister.
  • Teesta Setalvad, an activist who has spearheaded a campaign to prosecute Gujarat officials, called the verdict “hugely disappointing.”
  • Sentences will be announced on Monday.
  • Two more cases stemming from the riots are still pending.
Of the 24 people convicted Thursday, 11 were found guilty of murder, which brings a minimum punishment of life in prison and a possible death sentence, according to lawyers who emerged from the courthouse on Thursday. Others were convicted of lesser charges, including arson and looting. Sentences will be announced on Monday.
A spokesman for Mr. Modi’s party expressed satisfaction with the verdict because it did not point to official involvement.
“There was so much of a witch hunt against the current prime minister, and in that sense I am happy,” said the spokeswoman, Shaina Nana Chudasama. “If we move on as a society united, rather than distinguishing who is from B.J.P. or another party, we would be doing ourselves and the victims a great service.”
Teesta Setalvad, an activist who has spearheaded a campaign to prosecute Gujarat officials, called Thursday’s verdict “hugely disappointing” because the judge did not cast the riot as a conspiracy.
“When you have a mob of 66 accused, then common intent is already established,” she said. “That means at a local level, there was a conspiracy.” Several of the original defendants in the case have died since the proceedings began.
The Gujarat riots began on a February morning, when a train carrying Hindu pilgrims was surrounded by a crowd and caught fire at a train platform in Godhra, which has a large Muslim population. The remains of 59 people burned to death on the train were displayed in Ahmedabad, stoking anti-Muslim fury.

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Riots occurred sporadically for two months after that, with little interference from the state police.
At the time, Mr. Modi was accused by some of failing to deploy security forces to stop the killing. In 2005, the United States took the unusual step of imposing a visa ban on him for his role in the riots, and high-ranking officials from the United States and some European countries would not meet with him for almost a decade.
Since then, though, the memory of those events has receded. In 2013, an Indian court rejected a petition to prosecute Mr. Modi over the riots, on the grounds that there was not sufficient evidence to proceed. Mr. Modi’s party swept into power nationally after a campaign that focused heavily on economic development, and he has styled himself as a progressive, internationalist leader.
That effort may be damaged by Thursday’s verdict. “It suddenly brings back Mr. Modi of 2002, the person with dirty hands,” said Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, the author of a biography of the leader. “It weakens Mr. Modi’s claim to be the leader of a pluralistic India.”
Rupa Mody, a survivor of the episode, said she had hoped for more convictions. In a telephone interview, she described holding hands with her daughter and 13-year-old son, huddled together inside the compound, while people in the crowd outside threw gasoline in.
“Lots of people were fainting,” she said. “I also fell. Then somebody egged me on to get up and run.”
While running, she said, “I fell, and my daughter stooped to help, and in the process, she lost hold of my son’s hand. In the chaos that ensued, I lost him.” Though the police later displayed a number of children’s bodies, she said, they were so badly burned that she could not recognize him.
Follow Ellen Barry on Twitter @EllenBarryNYT.
Suhasini Raj contributed reporting.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

FOR THE RECORD: US House RESOLUTION 569 - Recognizing the tenth anniversary of the tragic communal violence in Gujarat, India.

 
 
FOR THE RECORD:

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hres569ih/pdf/BILLS-112hres569ih.pdf

112TH CONGRESS
2D SESSION

H. RES. 569


Recognizing the tenth anniversary of the tragic communal violence in Gujarat,

India.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES


MARCH 1, 2012


Mr. ELLISON submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the

Committee on Foreign Affairs

RESOLUTION


Recognizing the tenth anniversary of the tragic communal

violence in Gujarat, India.

Whereas, on February 27, 2002, in the city of Godhra in the

western state of Gujarat, India, 58 Hindus were tragically
burnt alive in a train coach fire;

Whereas, immediately following the train fire, communal violence

erupted in several towns in Gujarat;

Whereas, in the International Religious Freedom Report of

2003, the United States Department of State found that
‘‘In Gujarat the worst religious violence directed against
Muslims by Hindus took place in February and March
2002, leaving an estimated 2,000 dead and 100,000 displaced
into refugee camps. It was alleged widely that the
police and state government did little to stop the violence
promptly, and at times even encouraged or assisted Hin-
dus involved in the riots. Despite substantial evidentiary
material, the judicial commission responsible for investigating
the riots reported inconclusive findings. No Hindus
have been charged for the violence.’’;

Whereas a 2002 Human Rights Watch report entitled ‘‘We

Have No Orders to Save You’’ stated that ‘‘Between
February 28 and March 2 [2002] the attackers descended
with militia-like precision on Ahmedabad by the
thousands. Chanting slogans of incitement to kill . . .
they were guided by computer printouts listing the addresses
of Muslim families and their properties . . . and
embarked on a murderous rampage confident that the
police was with them. Portions of the Gujarati language
press meanwhile printed fabricated stories and statements
openly calling on Hindus to avenge the Godhra attacks.’’;

Whereas Brown University Professor Ashutosh Varshney, one

of the world’s experts on riots in India, wrote in a 2004
article that ‘‘Unless later research disconfirms the proposition,
the existing press reports give us every reason to
conclude that the riots in Gujarat were the first fullblooded
pogrom in independent India.’’;

Whereas the Indian magazine Tehelka reported that many of

the people who participated in the violence said it was
possible only because of the connivance of the state police
and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi;

Whereas the United States Government denied Minister Modi

a visa to the United States in 2005 on the grounds of
a religious freedom violation under the International Religious
Freedom Act of 1998, the first and only time such
a denial has been issued;

Whereas February 27, 2012, was the tenth anniversary of the
train fire and start of the communal violence in Gujarat,
India;

Whereas Human Rights Watch reported on February 24,

2012, that ‘‘Where justice has been delivered in Gujarat,
it has been in spite of the state government, not because
of it.’’;

Whereas minorities in Gujarat continue to experience religious

and socio-economic discrimination; and

Whereas the Department of State reported in its International

Religious Freedom Report of 2003 that ‘‘Christians
were also victims in Gujarat, and many churches
were destroyed.’’: Now, therefore, be it

1 Resolved, That the House of Representatives—

2 (1) recognizes the suffering of all those persons
3 who were affected by the 2002 violence in Gujarat,
4 India, including those persons who lost their lives in
5 the Godhra train fire;
6 (2) shares the opinion of the United States De-
7
partment of State that the Gujarat government has
8 not adequately pursued justice for the victims of the
9 2002 violence;
10 (3) remains concerned by reports from journal-
11
ists and human rights groups about the complicity
12 of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi in the
13 2002 violence;
14 (4) commends the United States Government
15 for denying a visa to Minister Modi in 2005 on the

1 grounds of a religious freedom violation under the
2 International Religious Freedom Act of 1998;
3 (5) applauds the Department of State and the
4 United States Commission on International Reli-
5
gious Freedom for their monitoring of religious free-
6
dom in India and throughout the world;
7 (6) salutes the role of Indian police officers
8 who, despite personal risk, provided honest testi-
9
mony about the violence in Gujarat;
10 (7) supports the role of independent media in
11 India that continue to highlight the Gujarat issue;
12 (8) commends the role of the National Human
13 Rights Commission and the Indian Supreme Court,
14 which has led to some convictions in Gujarat riot
15 cases, and also the arrest of a few high-level leaders
16 in the Modi administration;
17 (9) recognizes the work of Indian and Indian-
18 American civil society groups for their tireless devo-
19
tion to educating people about human rights and re-
20
ligious freedom in India; and
21 (10) calls on the Gujarat government to heed
22 the recommendations of the State Department to re-
23
store religious freedom for all citizens in Gujarat.