October  2004 
Year 11    No.102

Media


True lies

Succumbing to general hysteria about perceived threats to national security following the attack on Parliament in December 2001, the Indian media played judge and jury, citing the ‘official’ version of events as independent reportage and condemning innocents without
a fair hearing

BY NIRMALANGSHU MUKHERJI

In a recent article on the Parliament attack case, lawyer-activist Nandita Haksar raised the following issue: "We must demand that the government table a full report on the facts relating to the attack on Parliament. We have a right to know who actually attacked our Parliament. Why have we not made this demand? Out of a sense of nationalism? Are matters of national security best left to the State, no matter what its character?"

The point to note is that Haksar, who has been closely associated with the Parliament attack case since the beginning, has reasons to believe, two years later, that we do not know "who actually attacked our Parliament". Moreover, according to Haksar, this historical question has basically remained unasked.

Haksar’s phrase "a sense of nationalism" explains this failure of probity on a national scale. She points out that "(n)o one questioned the government’s story that the attack was the handiwork of Pakistan-based terrorists belonging to the Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad." This is because the "media, in a willing suspension of disbelief, published whatever the police and investigating agencies put out". Having swallowed the stories put out by the media, "the public no longer felt the need for a ‘judicial trial’…where was the need for formal proof?" Even institutions explicitly designed to uphold the norms of democracy acted virtually in complicity with the State: the National Human Rights Commission and the political parties – "committed to democratic and secular values of our Constitution" – failed to play their role as watchdogs of basic rights. "All this in the name of nationalism."

In contrast, there is respectable opinion that upholding of civil and human rights against all odds is the "best prophylactic" for upholding sovereignty and national security. As Kofi Annan, secretary general of the United Nations, put it: "(We) should all be clear that there is no trade-off between effective action against terrorism and the protection of human rights. On the contrary, I believe that in the long term we shall find that human rights, along with democracy and social justice, are one of the best prophylactics against terrorism." Similarly, Mary Robinson, former UN high commissioner for human rights urged States "to ensure that any measures restricting human rights in response to terrorism strike a fair balance between legitimate national security concerns and fundamental freedoms that is fully consistent with their international law commitments."

Haksar’s point about "nationalism" may be understood with the following example. It is well known that the media in India gave full support to the US invasion of Afghanistan; television channels actually designed "war rooms" from where the daily bombings and other atrocities were gleefully covered. But this did not prevent democratic and anti-imperialist individuals and groups, including the parties of the official Left, from joining the rest of the world in impressive anti-war demonstrations despite almost total blackout of these events by the media. Dozens of writer-activists simply shifted to alternative media to express their anger with the US. Many authors protested against the abject violations of human rights in Afghanistan and in Guantanamo Bay.

In fact, these anti-war protests continued well into the period in which all democratic voices fell silent when it came to the Parliament attack case. The only explanation is that the US, after all, is a State distinct from ours; so it is easy to condemn the US. However, when a terrorist attack is perceived to be directed against "our nation", universal democratic norms are forfeited in favour of concerns about "sovereignty" and "national security".

No wonder the handful of individuals such as Nandita Haksar and other courageous lawyers and human rights activists who stood up against the wall of silence were often branded as terrorists and foreign collaborators. When the death sentences were announced by the sessions court in December 2002, spokesperson of the BJP, VK Malhotra recommended punishment under POTA for those who had opposed the death sentence on the grounds that they were agents of Pakistan’s spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence.

After the Delhi high court acquitted SAR Geelani and Afsan Guru of all charges, an editorial in a prominent newspaper stated: "In this context, the unconcealed glee with which some of this country’s self-proclaimed champions of human rights have reacted to the acquittals leaves a foul taste in the mouth. One wonders what matters most to them, the security and the integrity of the country or the well-being of people accused of undermining both." Notice that the editorial continues to accuse Geelani and Afsan Guru libellously of "undermining" the security and the integrity of the country after they were acquitted by the court. The same newspaper had much else to say about "Human Rightswalas" that is essentially unprintable.

Willing suspension of disbelief

As Haksar notes, the "sense of nationalism" propelled even the liberal-democratic sections of the intelligentsia, not to mention the general public, into believing what the media projected as the truth within a week of the attack. In that sense, the complicity of the media with the police converged with "nationalist" sentiments: in fact, the media may be viewed as fuelling them. A survey of the role of the media is needed at this point to examine the issue to understand how exactly the suggested "complicity" works. We restrict our attention only to some samples from the print media – essentially, national English dailies, save for one exception, with which we begin.
The media coverage of SAR Geelani’s role in the attack is particularly revealing. The prosecution’s case against him was at best "absurd and tragic" and, as it turned out, the high court acquitted him of all charges with adverse remarks that could not have been pleasing to the police. However, after his arrest on December 15, 2001 (December 14,
according to Geelani), leading national newspapers reported on him in impressive detail within two days.

Sujit Thakur of Rashtriya Sahara captioned his Hindi write-up of December 17, 2001: "Geelani Sowed The Seeds Of Terrorism From Aligarh To England". Citing police sources, Thakur reported that from what Geelani had disclosed "it was "clear" that the Jaish-e-Mohammad had an elaborate plan of securing the support of the intelligentsia around the world; Geelani was assigned this task for India. To that end, he contacted students and teachers in several colleges and universities in India and abroad, including Aligarh Muslim University and the London School of Economics. In fact, Geelani was in close touch with a dreaded terrorist called "Ahmad Umar Saeed Sheikh" who was a student of LSE and was linked to the hijacking of IC-814. However, the police failed to list these very specific charges in the charge-sheet. In any case, Geelani never disclosed anything or confessed to anything, although he was forced to sign on some blank sheets. Apart from police "sources," the only other evidence Thakur cited for the preceding portrait of Geelani is that (a) he is said to have watched a film titled Destruction of a Nation several times, and (b) he had read a book on the assassination of John F. Kennedy titled Portrait of an Assassin. Thakur failed to cite the sources from which he gathered these facts.
Sutirtho Patranobis of The Hindustan Times titled his piece of December 17, 2001: "Don Lectured On Terror In Free Time". Patranobis wrote his piece after an interview with the principal of Zakir Hussain College where Geelani teaches Arabic. Throughout the interview the principal only made positive remarks on Geelani: "a seven-member team has selected him after going through his academic records and interviewing him", "students liked him", "seldom took very long leaves", "I have also not heard any colleague complain about his behaviour", "mixed around as any other professor", "nothing extraordinary in his character", etc. However, without citing any source at all, Patranobis concluded his piece with the following words: "In his free time, behind closed doors, either at his house or at Shaukat Hussain’s, another suspect to be arrested, he took and gave lessons on terrorism". This is, of course, what the police claimed in their briefings to justify Geelani’s arrest.

Devesh K. Pandey of The Hindu began his piece of December 17, 2001 with the heading: "Varsity Don Guided ‘Fidayeen’". As with the other reporters cited above and below, Pandey dispensed with routine qualifiers such as "allegedly" or "believed to have" or "reportedly", to assert that three of the four persons who supplied logistic support and provided a safe haven to the five ‘fidayeen’ studied at the prestigious Delhi University, one of whom turned out to be a highly qualified lecturer. Geelani had "disclosed" that he was in the know of the conspiracy since the day the ‘fidayeen’ attack was planned. Pandey could report this with confidence because, according to him, "intelligence agencies had been tapping Geelani’s telephone for some time as he had contacts in Pakistan". Unfortunately, the "intelligence agencies" failed to submit the tapped conversations as evidence before the court.

Rajnish Sharma of The Hindustan Times, December 17, 2001, reported on the "Hunt For Teacher’s Pet In Jubilee Hall". Exploring Geelani’s "international contacts", Sharma learnt about a Jordanian doctoral student of Astrophysics at Delhi University who knew Geelani. Sharma reports that they spent long hours together; also, lengthy phone-calls were made to West Asia from booths located in the Delhi University campus. In a box situated in the middle of his write-up, Sharma listed "Professor’s Proceeds" in a suggested deductive chain: Geelani recently purchased a house for Rs. 22 lakh in West Delhi; Delhi police are investigating how he came upon such a windfall; the terrorists who planned the operation were flush with funds; before carrying out the attack on Parliament, the terrorists had sent back to Srinagar Rs. 10 lakh of unspent money and a laptop computer. Sharma failed to mention the address of the house purchased by Geelani; also, the report does not carry either a photograph of the house or a copy of the sale-deed. In subsequent coverage, Sharma failed to follow up on the police investigation into the "windfall".

Both Nandita Haksar and Basharat Peer reported on the difficulties faced by Geelani’s family in finding even modest rented accommodation in Delhi. Mohammad Abdullah, Geelani’s father-in-law said, "A news report said Geelani bought a house worth 22 lakhs. If someone can find the house the family can move there in these difficult times." All this was reported within two days after the arrests, as noted.

Parade before the press

The media coverage reached new heights with the dramatic events of December 20, 2001, exactly a week after the attack. On that day, the investigating officer in charge of the case, ACP Rajbir Singh organised a press meet. In that meet, only one of the accused, Mohammad Afzal, was "brazenly paraded before the press". By then, Afzal was projected by the police as the principal link between Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-e-Toiba commanders in Kashmir and the terrorist operation in Delhi. During the parade, Afzal admitted to his active participation in the conspiracy. In what follows, we will not discuss the credibility of this "confession" since it had no legal validity; it was meant only for public consumption. We focus only on the media’s role in this sordid affair.

Commenting on the incident, Amnesty International wrote that "parading accused before national media during which they are made to incriminate themselves violates their right to be presumed innocent until convicted according to law in the course of fair proceedings and their right not to be compelled to testify against themselves or to confess guilt. These rights are provided in Articles 14(2) and 14 (3) (g) of the ICCPR respectively." These are well established norms that the media in a democratic set up are likely to know and follow. In that sense, the fact that the police allowed this meet to take place at all should have been of major concern to the media. But the media not only asked for it, they attended and reported the interview en masse.

In the interview, although Afzal admitted to his involvement in the crime, he categorically exonerated Geelani from any involvement. In full view of the assembled press, the investigating officer ACP Rajbir Singh reprimanded Afzal for mentioning Geelani despite his orders to the contrary. The ACP then asked the press not to report Afzal’s exoneration of Geelani. The whole thing was recorded on videotape, which was submitted as evidence in the court by the defence. This was big news by any measure. The "Varsity Don" who "sowed the seeds of terrorism from Aligarh to England" and who "guided the ‘fidayeen’" was exonerated from any involvement in the attack by the self-confessed principal operator in custody. It follows either that Afzal’s admission before the media was worthless if false, or, that the police (and media) stories about Geelani’s involvement handed out for the past week were false if the admission was true. Moreover, Rajbir Singh’s reprimand to Afzal suggested that Afzal’s "confession" could have been dictated by the police.

Why should the police take this recourse unless at least parts of the case against Afzal were fabricated? Finally, Rajbir Singh’s "request" to the press not to make Afzal’s statement public indicated that the police was trying to use the media to propagate a possibly suspect story. In sum, large sections of the police story announced so far began to collapse with this singular utterance from Afzal.

We would expect any self-respecting media to at least pick up the issue and tell the country that something was wrong somewhere. We would have expected headlines such as "Afzal Absolves Geelani From Any Involvement" and "Dec. 13 Case Turns Murky" to dominate front pages the next day. The demand for a full-fledged public inquiry on the entire sequence of events, including the conduct of the police, would have been the next logical step.

Instead, the entire media, with an interesting exception discussed below, simply followed the ACP’s order by suppressing the utterance. The channel Aaj Tak showed the interview with Afzal on the same evening without the utterance; the channel showed the full interview 100 days later. By then the ‘truth’ about the Parliament attack was firmly established in the public mind and the attention of the nation was focussed on the carnage in Gujarat.

However, the charge-sheet was still two months away. An alert media, including Aaj Tak itself, could have pounced on the unedited tape and highlighted the momentous utterance with the disturbing implications that follow from it. Needless to say, the entire matter was shelved in silence until the defence brought it up in court many months later. Reportedly, one of the journalists covering the case justified his silence on the ground that he could not afford to disobey Rajbir Singh as the ACP was a "very good" source of police information.

The reports that appeared on the next day, December 21, 2001, continued the tirades against Geelani. Under the title: "Terror Suspect Frequent Visitor To Pak Mission", Swati Chaturvedi of The Hindustan Times cited "authoritative sources" to report that Geelani had visited the high commission of Pakistan on two different social gatherings: an iftaar party and a national day celebration. Chaturvedi failed to mention whether officials of the Indian government, politicians, film stars, journalists and prominent citizens of Delhi, including some from the academia, also attended these functions.

According to Chaturvedi, a senior officer of the high commission, when contacted, had said, "we will have to go over our records", since a large number of people are invited to these occasions. As for Geelani in particular, the officer had said, "we do not know him and Pakistan has nothing to do with him." Chaturvedi found these responses "non-committal"; she also reported that the "security sources" did not "buy this argument".

In the next paragraph, Chaturvedi reverted to Geelani’s (earlier) "admission" that he was in touch with militants of the Jaish-e-Mohammad based in Pakistan – the montage suggesting a reason for Geelani’s "frequent" visits to the "Pak mission". However, throwing new light on the issue, Chaturvedi also reported Geelani’s admission that he had been provided with funds by the Jaish to buy two flats for the militants to operate from. As it turned out later during the trial, none of the 80 prosecution witnesses ever mentioned Geelani’s affiliation with any terrorist organisation. Moreover, the charge-sheet mentioned only Afzal and Shaukat who were allegedly responsible for renting some rooms in Delhi to be used as hideouts by the militants.

This seems to be a persistent problem with much of the reporting on this case: the AMU and the LSE connections, the house worth 22 lakhs, the two flats, the Jordanian angle, the secret meetings, the guidance to the ‘fidayeen’, and the like. The "information" ascribed variously to "authoritative sources", "security sources" and "intelligence agencies" was not used by these agencies themselves in subsequent proceedings. It is questionable, therefore, whether these "sources" in fact passed on such information to Chaturvedi and other reporters.

Neeta Sharma’s six-column headline report in The Hindustan Times of the same day: "Pak Uses Fanatics To Spread Terror In India" – was placed below colour photographs of Afzal, Shaukat and Geelani, in that order from left to right. The photographs were cumulatively captioned "Confession Time", and each photograph was accompanied by some remarks apparently made by the person whose photograph it was. The artwork gave the impression that these remarks were snippets from the confessions made by each of them individually. In reality, as noted, only Afzal talked to the media, and the official confession of Shaukat, under POTA, was to take place only later on the 21st itself; Geelani neither disclosed nor confessed to anything. These factual details are further obliterated by Sharma’s opening sentence: "The Delhi police on Thursday allowed four people held in connection with the attack on Parliament to go public with their version of how it was planned and how terrorists operate."
Embedded in the piece was a box with three headings in colour: "Perfectly Disguised" reported on Afzal’s portrayal of the terrorists, "Inside Story of IC-814" reported, via Afzal, that one of the terrorists was also one of the hijackers, and "The Elusive Gazi Baba" described the secretive Pakistani terrorist with many aliases who would not be easy to catch. The rest of Sharma’s piece need not detain us since she basically repeats what we have already covered. However, we must note that the story is false in at least two respects: (a) "four people" did not "go public", only Afzal did; (b) the Delhi police did not "allow" Afzal to go public, it directed him to.

The point of interest about this story, and many similar stories across the country, is that it had all the features of settled truth. The country now knew who the terrorists were, what they looked like and what their backgrounds were. The country also knew, from the horse’s mouth, how the operation was planned and executed. All that remained to be done was to catch Gazi Baba – not an easy task, the author warned. All this within the breathtaking period of a week! The judicial trial became virtually redundant: "where was the need for formal proof?" Haksar agonised.

The Times of India also reported Afzal’s confession on December 21, 2001, under the title: "Terrorists Were Close-Knit Religious Fanatics". The report is interesting in a variety of ways. The report focussed entirely on Afzal and on the politico-ideological aspects of the attack on Parliament rather than on its operational and conspiratorial details. Afzal narrated the religious influence of Masood Azhar, the leader of Jaish-e-Mohammad, and explained the geo-political goals of Pakistan. He described the mental profiles of the terrorists in detail: religious fanatics given to regular prayers, totally focussed on their job, attired in Western clothes to deceive the police etc.; it is difficult to miss the resemblance with the alleged attackers on 9/11. Thus, a complete and reassuringly familiar picture of Islamic terrorism was superimposed on the factual details of conspiracy and attack already settled by police investigation. All questions have been answered.

Interestingly, in apparent violation of the ACP’s order, The Times of India story did actually report Afzal’s exoneration of Geelani, but in the following words: "Afzal was also quick to point out that while he may have been guilty of abetting in the crime, his co-accused, Shaukat Hussain and Syed AR Gilani, had nothing to do with the attack." While applauding this exception to the rule, we also note:

(a) The statement was buried in the fourth column of the report carried in the inside pages of the newspaper devoted to regional news and was placed under "Delhi".

(b) Afzal did not exonerate both Shaukat and Geelani; he absolved just Geelani when asked specifically by a correspondent. By falsely mentioning both the co-accused, the report gave the impression that Afzal was merely engaged in an amiable gesture to save his friends; hence, Afzal’s statement lost factual weight.

(c) During the trial, Afzal stated that in the interview he had said that Geelani was "innocent". During the said interview, he also stated, "I have never shared any of this information with him." Without these qualifications, just the phrase "had nothing to do with the attack" leaves open the possibility that even though Geelani did not directly participate in the planning and the execution of the attack itself, he was broadly aware
and supportive of the militants’ goals.

(d) The preceding apprehension is immediately borne out by the rest of the report in the same paragraph of the story: "According to [the police] all those arrested were in the know of the plan to attack, which itself is sufficient ground to proceed against them." The wording of this statement not only diluted the effect of Afzal’s statement as noted, it also gave the police the last word in the sense that the police had merely asked "to proceed" after giving "sufficient ground" for arrest.

(e) Finally, the reporter failed to mention the utter contradiction between mere knowledge of the plan to attack and the tonnes of grave charges – "guiding the ‘fidayeen’", "buying two flats for the militants", "keeping in touch with terrorists based in Pakistan", etc. – which apparently emanated from police sources for a full week.

In sum, Afzal’s statement was mentioned in a way such that its far-reaching implications would not be seen. No wonder nothing happened after this report.

The trial and after

As a net result of the campaign and the verdict by the media, the Parliament attack case gradually disappeared from the media and public view within weeks. As the entire country bayed for their blood, the four accused, charged under POTA, languished in jail. Shaukat’s wife, co-accused Afsan, gave birth to their child in prison. The trauma of the past months broke her spirit and she developed psychotic symptoms. Afzal’s and Geelani’s young wives travelled long distances in hostile territory and waited for hours to meet their "high-risk" husbands in handcuffs, praying desperately for competent legal defence and fair trial. The children dropped out of schools as the families moved from one shelter to another; medical eye-treatment for Geelani’s little daughter had to be discontinued. Except for occasional coverage in the Kashmir press, the national media largely ignored the human tragedy.

The lack of interest from the media persisted during the trial of the case that "has come to be something of a marker in the national psyche". Basharat Peer reports: "I had expected a crowd of reporters at what seemed to me the most high-profile legal case in India, but was surprised to see very few there."

A handful of gallant lawyers and human rights activists worked hard to secure proper defence for the accused. Very few lawyers were willing to oblige: most "did not want to be associated with the Parliament attack case." Defence was often insufficient, with lawyers dropping out in succession. Moreover, since the hon’ble judge of the sessions court ordered a "fast-track" trial in this immensely complex case, the defence was always running short of time to gather and examine evidence. Even so, huge cracks appeared in the case: some of the arrest memos looked forged; the accused were ‘identified’ by shopkeepers, landlords, etc. without identification parades; crucial physical evidence was found not to be sealed; call records from phone companies did not match the times recorded by the police; questions arose about the credibility of the evidence related to the laptop computer; tapped conversations were widely misinterpreted; SIM cards and transcripts of telephone conversations were either missing or were not made available, and so on. Much of this was either barely mentioned or not reported at all, not to mention subjecting them to incisive analysis.

Finally, with the arduous efforts of some individuals, a high-profile national defence committee for SAR Geelani was formed with Rajani Kothari as the chairperson. Over 200 teachers from Delhi and Jawaharlal Nehru Universities signed a petition to the Chief Justice of India pointing out problems with the trial and asking for fair trial, especially for Geelani.

After a sustained campaign by the committee and the efforts of some upright journalists, at least the Geelani part of the trial began to appear, in bits, in some newspapers, notably The Hindu and The Indian Express. Afzal and Shaukat’s trials remained essentially unexamined by the media.

In fact, in some write-ups pleading for Geelani’s innocence, there was a conscious attempt to separate Geelani’s case from those of Afzal and Shaukat. After a brief review of the Parliament attack case, senior journalist Prem Shankar Jha, known for his concern for civil rights and democratic values, criticised the police in fairly strong terms: "The police have become a law unto themselves and don’t feel obliged to avoid disrupting a suspect’s life and reputation without good prima facie cause… they now believe in arresting people first and wringing a confession out of them… This is the true face of the democracy of which we were once so proud."

Thus, in his review of the case, Jha asked, "Why has [Geelani’s] life been destroyed and why are the police desperately attempting to prove a case that doesn’t exist?" However, Jha also stated, "The case presented by the police against Afzal looks prima facie to be fairly strong." Jha failed to note that the act of "arresting people first and wringing a confession out of them" applies to Afzal, if at all, since Geelani never made a confession.

While these reports were few and far between and were carried in English dailies with lesser reach, even this modest critical effort was massively confronted by the Zee television network. Just before the sessions court judgement was to be delivered, it repeatedly telecast a film on the Parliament attack case entitled December 13, which was not merely a re-enactment of the charge-sheet, "it in fact made allegations against Geelani that went far beyond the prosecution case". "The film portrayed Geelani as the mastermind and showed scenes of him talking to the five dead attackers and planning the attack. The film was shown to the Prime Minister and then the home minister, and the media recorded their approval of the film," Nandita Haksar reports. Although the defence secured a stay from the high court restraining the broadcast of the film, the Supreme Court of India vacated it on the ground that judges could not be influenced. Thus, the ‘whole truth’ that was placed before the general public only in dribbles in print before, was now presented with the full vigour and authority of the visual media.
On the day the sessions court announced the verdict, "the courtroom was for once crowded with reporters"; "led by Singh, personnel from the Delhi police’s anti-terrorism wing, who had arrested Geelani and conducted the investigation, filled the courtroom. The policemen, who were usually unshaven and shabbily clothed, were dressed in expensive suits, with matching neckties. They would look good in the newspaper photographs tomorrow, I thought," Basharat Peer reported.

As the verdict sentencing Afzal, Shaukat and Geelani to death and Afsan Guru to five years’ RI was announced, "the members of the special branch, in pressed suits and polished shoes, could not stop smiling; they had become national heroes." Except for a very few restrained editorials, jubilation engulfed the media; there was all-out praise for a judgement in a trial the media had not really attended. With the sentencing, Afsan’s condition deteriorated while Afzal, Shaukat and Geelani were shifted to death row. We skip another prolonged period of indifference shown by the media and move straight to the high court judgement of October 29, 2003.

The court confirmed the death sentences of Afzal and Shaukat while it acquitted Geelani and Afsan. At least one newspaper thought that the acquittals showed "the ineffectiveness of our intelligence agencies" and "the inadequacy of the judiciary’s vertebrae". The same newspaper also complained: "the fact that Geelani had admitted his involvement to the police cannot be wished away".

However, most newspapers welcomed the judgement. The Hindu thought the "judgement is a welcome reflection of the strength of the judicial process, particularly its capacity for self-correction". According to The Indian Express, the judgement "highlights the strengths of the Indian judicial process and the eternal quest for justice". The Hindustan Times admitted, "when the Delhi police announced that they had come across evidence beyond doubt Geelani was guilty, many including this newspaper, made the mistake of believing them".

We recall some of the "evidence" against Geelani, discussed in detail above, that The Hindustan Times "made the mistake of believing": In his free time, behind closed doors, Geelani took and gave lessons on terrorism; Geelani recently purchased a house for Rs. 22 lakh in West Delhi; Geelani admitted that he was in touch with militants of the Jaish-e-Mohammad based in Pakistan; Geelani also admitted that he had been provided with funds by the Jaish to buy two flats for the militants to operate from; Delhi police allowed four people held in connection with the attack on Parliament to go public with their version of how it was planned and how terrorists operate. All of this was reported between December 16 and 21, 2001.

The charge-sheet was finally filed in May, 2002. In the charge-sheet, none of the preceding evidence that the police "came across" was mentioned, as noted. Even then the newspaper kept quiet, not to mention making no effort to visit the house and the flats that pointed to Geelani’s guilt "beyond doubt". This silence was maintained throughout the trial. The same newspaper hailed the judgement of the sessions court, although it, for one, well knew that the police had used the newspaper to pass on straight and horrendous lies. The admission of guilt came only on October 31, 2003 – a full 18 months later – unaccompanied by any apology to Geelani and his family.

Furthermore, by any rational standards, Geelani and Afsan’s acquittal was expected to unleash a burst of investigative journalism. Within hours of the high court judgement, lawyers for the defence, Nitya Ramakrishnan and Nandita Haksar asked the most obvious questions about the police and the judiciary. Ramakrishnan asked: "Why had the police, with the best legal advice and in such a high-profile case, not paused to consider if it had sufficient evidence to prosecute the case?" Haksar commented: "The question that remains to be answered is how did any court sentence a man to death on no evidence at all?"

The issue is simple: the grievous miscarriage of justice for Geelani and Afsan cast an extensive shadow on the very credibility of the functioning of the police and the judiciary, notwithstanding a partial amelioration of the judiciary through the high court judgement. Why should we now believe in the prosecution’s story for the rest of the case? In particular, what justifies the underlying assumption that, although the police, the prosecution and the sessions court have been horribly wrong in one part of the case, they have been vindicated in the other parts? With Geelani out of the way, who was the guide, the local mastermind of the terrorists? Once we know that Afzal falsely implicated Geelani in his confession, why should we continue to believe that the rest of his confession is true, especially the parts where he described the trans-border conspiracy to attack the Parliament, and for which the investigating agencies failed to submit any independent evidence?

What are the implications of the disturbing fact that Afzal is a past militant of the JKLF who surrendered to the Border Security Force in 1993?
In sum, the high court judgement was yet another occasion for the media to re-examine the intricate joints of this case and to demand a comprehensive public inquiry to settle all doubts. To return to the opening remark from Nandita Haksar, the media failed the country once again by leaving "matters of national security" to "the State, no matter what its character". n

(Nirmalangshu Mukherji teaches philosophy at Delhi University). ([email protected]).

 


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