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November
20, 2000
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When
the State compromises
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The
Veerappans thrive
The
strength of a government is not so much the weapons in its arsenal
as the courage of conviction of its leaders and their determination
to uphold the rule of law
The
bard said, all is well that ends well. But can a conscientious
citizen take such a simplistic stand on the safe return of Kannada
matinee idol Rajkumar? Till the time of writing, it is not known
under what conditions the sandalwood smuggler and elephant poacher
Veerappan released him. To make matters worse, Rajkumar has gone
back on his story that it was his acting skills, about which nobody
has any doubts, aided and abetted by a mysterious lady doctor, that
finally hoodwinked Veerappan.
A government
spokesman has conceded that some of Veerappans demands have
been fulfilled. Whether Rs 10 crore or more was paid, as some newspaper
reports suggest, will be known, hopefully, when the apex court forces
the two governments to come out with the truth. Be that as it may,
there are two disturbing developments. One, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister
M. Karunanidhi honouring the emissary team, that includes Tamil
nationalist leader P.
Nedumaran,
Nakkeeran editor R.R. Gopal and Kolathur Mani, whose name figured
in the investigation of Rajiv Gandhis assassination, with
angavastra as if they had returned from Sydney with gold medals.
Two, Nedumaran pleading against any commando operation to nab Veerappan
until the Special Task Force personnel, who perpetrated atrocities
on the tribals, are punished. Implicit in all this is the
compromise the State has made with a hardened criminal, and that
is what is disturbing.
One
shudders at the very thought of what the governments of Tamil Nadu
and Karnataka would have done if the Supreme Court had not stood
in the way of their meek surrender before the forest brigand. Of
course, its not that what happened eventually is any different
from such a surrender. It is doubtful whether the governments realise
that it is the very thought that the state is ready to compromise
that emboldened Veerappan to pick Rajkumar up. After all, did not
the State negotiate with him when some lower-level government officials
were kidnapped a few years ago? This reminds me of a joke I read
in the Readers Digest a long time ago:
An honourable lady was approached by a not-so-honourable
man. Will you sleep with me for a night? he asked.
No way, she shot back.
But I will give you 10 billion dollars, he persisted.
Ten billion dollars! Then, yes, she replied.
That
settles the question. Now let us bargain, said the man gleefully.
The state governments found themselves in the pitiable position
of the propositioned woman when they showed a readiness to compromise.
The Government of India faced such a moral question when, in the
exuberance of freedom, a demand was made to Pandit Nehru that the
State give employment in the Armed Forces to all those who served
in Subhas Chandra Boses Indian National Army (INA). Incidentally,
it was Nehru who argued their case at the famous INA trial at Delhis
Red Fort. Yet, he felt that for all their patriotism, they were
rebels who had fought against the State and they had, therefore,
no place in the Indian Army. Nehru had to face a barrage of criticism
for this decision but he stood his ground and today, thanks to him,
the Indian Army is known for its professionalism.
Decades
later, the government faced a similar question when demands were
made that the Sikh jawans who killed their commander at Ramgarh
and ran away from the cantonment to protest the storming of the
Golden Temple at Amritsar by the security forces during Operation
Bluestar be taken back into service. Arguments were advanced that
their rebellion was more emotional than political and they should,
therefore, be given the benefit of the doubt. Fortunately, the government
did not compromise on its principles. They were all discharged from
service.
But
the same cannot be said about all the decisions of the government.
It is fairly well known now that the Punjab problem arose in the
main because those who were then in power at the Centre wanted to
build up Sant Bhindranwale as a counter to the established centres
of power in the state. For the Frankenstein that the Centre cultivated,
the nation had to pay a huge price. Similarly, the State compromised
with the Tamil Tigers of Sri Lanka when it offered them land and
a host of other facilities for training, little knowing that one
day these forces would bite the hand that fed them. The State had
no business dealing with a guerrilla group, whatever Neduraman or
Vaiko may say in justification of what the Rajiv Gandhis government
did.
Whats
worse, it is no longer uncommon for governments to strike deals
with criminal groups on the ground that it is necessary to fight
bigger criminal groups. In other words, obliging Chhota Rajan mination to
uphold the rule of law, no matter what the consequence may be. When
the then Union Home Minister, Mufti Mohammed Sayeeds daughter
Rubaiya was kidnapped, the State acquiesced to the demands of the
militants in its bid to secure her release. It is this readiness
to compromise that the State demonstrated that emboldened the perpetrators
of Kandahar to demand and secure the release of three teorists
cooling their heels in Indian jails.
It
is, again, the State which is to blame for giving Veerappan some
measure of respectability. Had it been absolutely scrupulous in
its conduct, surely the human rights violations inherent in the
detaining of dozens of villagers for years without proper trials
would not have occurred. Those women and children may have collaborated
with Veerappan willingly or unwillingly, but they certainly cannot
be described as dreaded terrorists against whom as draconian a law
as TADA should be applied. Had the State been fair to them, Veerappan
would not have got a cause to hold on to.
For
all we know, the massacre of 35 innocent Sikhs at Chitsinghpura
in Kashmir might have been the handiwork of Hizbul Mujahideen and
Lashkar-e-Toiba as claimed by the government, but by catching hold
of five local Muslims, murdering and defacing them in order to present
them as hardcore Pakistani militants, the security forces
have cast doubts on its own version of the incident. The point is
that the State, whatever the provocation, cannot compromise on principle.
During the freedom struggle, the enlightened leadership of the Congress
did not approve of the terrorist methods people like Aurobindo advocated.
However patriotic the Bhagat Singhs and Khudiram Boses might have
been, their ways were unacceptable. The only exception made was
when the Congress defended the action of those who conspired in
the sensational killing in Pune over a century ago which was, perhaps,
the first act of terrorism. Its this willingness to compromise
that is exploited by the Veerappans. The State must at all times
uphold the rule of law.
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