Justice. Blind To The Victim
IT WAS not just
the carnage that was clinically planned and supervised by the State,
it was also the aftermath. Even before the riots began, the Vishwa Hindu
Parishad had started chalking out a strategy for providing legal assistance
to Hindus who were likely to be accused of rioting and killing. Dhimant
Bhatt and Deepak Shah, members of the BJP’s Vadodara unit —
Bhatt also being the chief accountant of the Maharaja Sayajirao University
(MSU) and Shah a member of the University’s executive body —
told TEHELKA that key members of the Sangh Parivar met on the night
of the Sabarmati Express incident to constitute a panel of advocates
to defend the rioters. The fact that the VHP had a good number of advocates
— both private lawyers and public prosecutors — among its
ranks, made the task easy. Deepak Shah named many Vadodara lawyers,
such as Rajendra Trivedi, Neeraj Jain and Tushar Vyas, who were present
in that preparatory meeting.
In district Sabarkantha, Narendra Patel and Mohan Patel — both
members of the RSS — told TEHELKA that after the riots the RSS
had formed a body called Sankalan to provide legal aid to Hindu rioters.
Many of the VHP’s lawyers, who had their own private practices,
became defence counsels for the accused, and public prosecutors who
were either members of the VHP or sympathetic to the Sangh extended
indirect assistance to the rioters.
The public prosecutors,
instead of taking forward the charges against the accused, actually
helped them in the case. So, in many places, both the defence and the
prosecution were on the same side — on the side of those who looted,
raped and killed. What hope then did the Muslim community have of seeing
their tormentors convicted? First the police sided with the rioters
through shoddy investigations, and now the prosecution too was ranged
against the victims.
Chetan Shah, an active VHP member and a leading Ahmedabad lawyer, was
the first to represent the accused in the Naroda Patiya massacre. The
government later appointed him as the public prosecutor in the Gulbarg
society case. TEHELKA met a Gulbarg case accused named Prahlad Raju,
who said that while he was on the run, he was being advised by Chetan
Shah about when he should surrender before the police.
In Mehsana district,
Dilip Trivedi, general secretary of the VHP’s Gujarat unit, is
also the senior pleader leading a team of about a dozen public prosecutors
working under him. Mehsana was among the worst-affected areas during
the riots. Two cases in Mehsana in particular — the Deepda Darwaza
incident in Visnagar town and the Sardarpura incident — had shaken
the conscience of civil society for the number of people killed and
also the barbaric manner in which the killings were carried out. Trivedi,
whose job was to oppose the bail applications moved by the accused in
these two cases, was accused by civil society of helping the accused
get bail. After several representations before the Gujarat High Court
and the Supreme Court by the victims, Trivedi was removed from representing
them in riot cases. TEHELKA went to see Trivedi at his office within
the Mehsana court premises on June 15, 2007.
TRIVEDI REVEALED that in his capacity as the VHP’s general secretary,
he had coordinated all the riot cases in Gujarat. While the reporter
was sitting in Trivedi’s chamber, two people walked in to discuss
a riot-related case in which Hindus were accused. The men needed Trivedi’s
help to engage a lawyer who could represent the accused. Trivedi called
up a few lawyers and tried to find his visitors a suitable lawyer. After
the two men left his office, Trivedi said that the defence lawyer who
was handling their case had fallen ill, and the responsibility of finding
a new defence lawyer had again fallen upon him. He grumbled about having
to manage everything — from coordinating with government lawyers
and defence advocates to talking to cops who were reinvestigating the
riot cases. He further said that out of a total of 74 riot-related cases
in Mehsana, only two had resulted in conviction.
“In one case, I got the acquittal after I made an appeal in the
Sessions Court… In the second case, the appeal has been made before
the High Court but everyone is out on bail... the conviction was wrong.”
He then went on to narrate the worst cases of the killing and looting
of Muslims that happened in Mehsana post-Godhra. He said one such case
— the Sardarpura case — had been stayed by the Supreme Court,
but since the accused were out on bail, he was not worried. He then
went on to explain how after the accused in the Sardarpura riot case
were granted bail by the Mehsana court, the victims had made such a
big noise, that The Times Of India had carried a front-page
story accusing him of playing a partisan role in riot-related cases.
A gleeful Trivedi boasted that even though the allegations against him
were true, nothing could be proved “on paper”. Everybody
knew, he said, that after the riots, he had camped in every district
holding meetings with government prosecutors, his own workers and police
officers.
In Sabarkantha,
TEHELKA met public prosecutor Bharat Bhatt, who also happens to be the
VHP’S district president. Bhatt said he had been doing his best
to help the accused. This public prosecutor has in fact turned broker
— instead of fighting for justice, he is pushing for out-of-court
settlements.