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Basu Govt still suppressing facts on Margi massacre
Udayan Namboodiri
CALCUTTA, May 1: The 15th anniversary of West Bengal's biggest ever case of
mass lynching was observed here on Wednesday by monks of the Ananda Marg
even as the Jyoti Basu government continues to conceal the facts on the
gruesome killing from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).
On the morning of April 30, 1982, 16 Ananda Marg monks and a nun were
dragged out of taxis that were taking them to an educational conference at
their headquarters in Tiljala in the city's southern suburbs.
At three spots simultaneously, they were beaten to death and then set on
fire. All this was watched by thousands of people. Yet, to this day, not a
single arrest has been made.
Finally, in late 1996, the NHRC decided to take up the investigation of the
case.
But without the West Bengal government's cooperation it cannot go far.
Already two reminders have been sent but the Basu government has not
responded.
Meanwhile, an IAS officer of the West Bengal cadre, Sher Singh, has stirred
a hornet's nest by offering to reveal the facts of the case along with
relevant documents. Singh was additional district magistrate of 24 Parganas
at the time of the incident and claimed to the Central Administration
Tribunal (CAT) in his petition (No.1108 of 1994) that he was victimised for
his refusal to toe the Marxist government's line on the case and
suspended.
Singh has informed the CAT that since he is bound by the Official Secrets
Act he can only reveal the full facts if demanded by the ``competent
authority''. However peppered all over his petition are hints that the
lynching was carefully planned and executed by Marxist cadres over a land
dispute with the Marg. The Marxists had feared the Margis would upstage
their domination in the Kasba belt, which was at that time a base for the
CPI(M).
The West Bengal government claimed after the incident that the Margis were
lynched by an irate mob. But there is still no explanation as to how such
spontaneous action could take place at three different spots within a
one-kilometre radius. Moreover, there were three police stations in the
vicinity but the police did not arrive at the scene till two hours after the
lynching.
Acharya Trambakeshwarananda Avadoot, public relations secretary of the Marg,
told The Indian Express that the ``only success achieved by the Basu
government has been the concealing of its involvement in the State's biggest
case of lynching.'' Mantreshwarananda Avadoot, a central committee member of
the Marg said the Marxists had planned to eliminate all the top leaders of
the organisation but its goons, in a case of mistaken identity, selected
ordinary monks for the slaughter.
A silent procession was taken out in south Calcutta yesterday by the Marg to
remind Calcuttans of one of the permanent blotches on their collective
consciousness. Though over the years the Marg has picked up a lot of
controversy -- its role in the famous Purulia airdrop being one -- people
still sympathetically relate them to the victims of the 1982 incident.
Copyright © 1997 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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