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The
volatile debate over the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO) leaves
me puzzled. If we were a country in which justice worked as efficiently
as it does in western democracies, we could afford to be worried by preventive
detention and draconian powers in the hands of the police. But this is
India folks and for the average Indian, the police already has draconian
powers. Rape victims have been known to be raped by the policemen whose
help they seek and this causes so much terror that in rural India women
prefer to stay away from police stations. Ordinary Indians going about
their daily business are routinely shot dead in "encounters"
not just in villages but in cities like Mumbai and Delhi. What happens
to the policemen who execute these extra-judicial killings? Nobody knows.
By the time they are brought to justice-usually after 20 years-nobody
remembers or cares except the relatives of their victims.
This
is not to say that we should happily support a law that gives the police
even more power. The point I am making is that if Union Law Minister Arun
Jaitley spent more time improving the justice system than defending POTO,
he might be doing a more useful job. In his defence, it needs to be said
that he has tried harder than most of his predecessors, but with a backlog
in our courts that will take more than 300 years to clear, his efforts
have been, at best, feeble.
Jaitley has reduced procedural delays in civil cases and has attempted
to set up "fast-track" courts across the country, but little
has been done to rid us of silly laws that cause much of the problem.
In fact, quite the opposite has been happening. We now have a ban on smoking
in public.
Did the Supreme Court judges who imposed it think about how this ban
was going to be policed? About the opportunities corrupt policemen now
have to extract money from our poorest citizens if they are caught smoking
a bidi in public at the end of a hard day's work? Did they at all stop
to wonder whether a ban on smoking was necessary when breathing the foul
air in our cities amounts to smoking a packet of cigarettes a day?
We like to copy what the West does and-despite our anti-Americanism-we
are in awe of America as we are of no other country. So, if the Americans
can ban smoking in public places we must do it and if they feel the need
for stricter laws to stop terrorism then we must have them too. Our problem
is that we emulate only the easy stuff. We do not bother to try and clean
the air in our cities or provide our citizens with clean drinking water
or unadulterated food or sanitary living conditions. These things would
take too long and require too much work. So, why not place a ban on smoking?
Our judges have as much a role in improving our decrepit justice system
as the law minister does, but here they appear to feel that they have
no role to play. Why, for instance, does the chief justice not consider
fining judges and lawyers who allow cases to drag on indefinitely? Would
this not be more important than a ban on smoking in public places? Why
do they not set deadlines for at least cases of vital public interest
like the Uphaar cinema case in which more than 50 innocent citizens lost
their lives because of the criminal negligence of municipal officials?
What about the massacres of Sikhs in 1984? Is it not sickening that more
than 3,000 people were killed in the city of Delhi alone and we have still
not been able to bring the killers to justice?
The Congress, responsible in its time for a much uglier law called TADA,
is hugely exercised over POTO. Even Silent Sonia has become so vocal on
the subject that they say the prime minister currently spends a lot of
his time wooing her support in Parliament. Fine, but would Sonia Gandhi
like to publicly declare why she does not demand that those who killed
innocent Sikhs in 1984 be brought to justice? What about just one little
walkout from the Lok Sabha over this issue?
Let me make it clear that I am against POTO because I believe that it
will only make it easier for the police to do their job in a shoddier
fashion. I am also against it because I find it hard to believe that it
will be more effective than TADA which gave us a conviction rate of just
over 1 per cent. What I am saying is that in my view POTO will make little
difference to a justice system in such an abysmal state of collapse that
we had Masood Azhar and Omar Sheikh in jail for five years without trial.
After our foreign minister graciously escorted them to Kandahar in exchange
for the passengers of IC-814 they have gone on to achieve mighty feats
of terrorism. Azhar's Jaish-e-Mohammed recently tried to blow up the Jammu
and Kashmir Assembly and Sheikh was involved with the events of September
11. With the rot going so deep can we seriously believe POTO will make
a difference?
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