The Lemmings of Hashimpura
The largest incident of custodial killing, where officers of
the notorious Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) shot dead 42 persons
from the Muslim community and sought to destroy the evidence has
resulted in acquittal because of the deliberately lackadaisical and
shoddy investigation says Vibhuti Narain Rai, retired officer of the
Indian Police Force (IPS) in an exclusive interview to Communalism
Combat-Newsclick and Hillele.org. . Worse still, successive
governments since 1987, over 20 years, belonging to different
political parties, were never interested in punishing the guilty.
A 28 year
battle for justice has ended at least for now, in abject failure, with
a UP session’s court acquitting all the 16 accused in the infamous
Hashimpura massacre case. Despite firsthand accounts from survivors of
the incident, in which about 42 people of the Muslim community were
allegedly picked up and brutally murdered by armed constabulary, the
Sessions court held that the prosecution has failed to establish
its its case beyond reasonable doubt, leading to serious questions
about the investigating authorities competence and will to deal
effectively with the case. The judgment raises critical and serious
questions about the efficacy of our state institutions in dealing with
cases involving minorities.
“The sight that met my eyes the night of May 22, 1987 is
something forever embedded in my psyche,” says Rai, adding, that
“language is a very poor substitute for thought. Bodies lying half
dead, fully dead, on the banks, flowing in the canal...every step I
took I was scared I would step on someone’s head or limb. One lone
survivor, Babuddin recounted the horror to us in an eye-witness
account.”
Rai who’s seminal work on the Communal Bias in the Police machinery
was first publicly written about in
Communalism Combat (February 1995) later
published the subject matter of his research in a book when the
government that had granted him permission while in service to conduct
it, disowned the work. He is the first officer to have squarely
confronted the existence of this communal bias.
Shahr Mein Curfew, (1988) his
experiences of heading the police in Allahabad has also sold many
copies.
In this exclusive interview conducted in collaboration between
Communalism Combat, News click and Hillele TV, we discuss the
Hashimpura massacre with the policeman who filed the first FIR in the
case, retired IPS officer VN Rai. Given that 42 people did not just
fall down and die, how can this judgment be explained? Mr. Rai.
tells us about what he saw on the night of 22nd May 1987 and the
prevailing communal bias in police services. He explains how he
believes that CID failed to adequately investigate and prosecute the
matter. Mr Rai also addresses the issue of how steps can be taken to
prevent any further incidents of this nature.
Hashimpura was the largest incident of
custodial killing, where the senior leadership of the PAC and also the
political leadership needed to be investigated but this ghastly
massacre has never been acknowledged or treated as such by the state
apparatus be it the National Police Academy, Hyderabad or State Police
Academies. Representation of different sections of Indians,
Minorities, Dalits, Adivasis and Women within the law and Order
machinery is a policy measure that needs to be implemented to ensure a
forces that reflects India’s diversity.
From the start, the Crime Investigation
department (CID) ensured that the masterminds were not investigated
and punished, says Rai in this interview. The decision to abduct and
kill in cold blood 42 young Muslims has had to have been taken at the
highest level and yet no attempt was ever made to investigate who gave
the instructions for this horrific custodial killing. Massacres of
this kind are a huge challenge before the Indian state and we have
simply not faced up to the challenge.
Rai had not only recorded his statement before
the CID but also deposed before the Court. His forthcoming book on the
massacre he says is a repayment of a debt that has weighed heavily on
his conscience since the dark night of May 22, 1987.
A 28 year battle for justice has ended at least for now, in abject
failure, with a UP session’s court acquitting all the 16 accused in
the infamous Hashimpura massacre case. Despite firsthand accounts from
survivors of the incident, in which about 42 people of the Muslim
community were allegedly picked up and brutally murdered by armed
constabulary, the Sessions court held that the prosecution has failed
to establish its its
case beyond reasonable doubt, leading to serious questions about the
investigating authorities competence and will to deal effectively with
the case. The judgment raises critical and serious questions about the
efficacy of our state institutions in dealing with cases involving
minorities.