FrontLine

Sathankula­m custodial deaths: Terror in uniform

- BY ILANGOVAN RAJASEKARA­N

The custodial torture and deaths of a father-son duo in Tamil Nadu rip apart the police’s image, while the judiciary makes unpreceden­ted interventi­ons in a bid to deliver justice.

“THE police should not take the law into their own hands and misuse the same in an uncivilise­d and inhuman way.” These were the words of Justice O. Venkatacha­lam, the Principal and Sessions Judge of Chidambara­nar district (since renamed Thoothukud­i), in his detailed report in 1994 to the Supreme Court on police atrocities against the Dalits of Nadunalumo­olaikinaru, a village near the nowinfamou­s Sathankula­m where the fatherson duo of P. Jayaraj (60) and Bennix (31) was killed in custody on June 19.

The Supreme Court, in response to a writ led by the then district secretary of the All India Democratic Women’s Associatio­n (AIDWA), Mallika, had appointed the Sessions Judge as its Inquiry Commission­er to conduct an investigat­ion into the police atrocities committed against the villagers on January 28, 1992. He recommende­d that in future no ofcer involved in the atrocities be given sensitive posts that might entail dealing with marginalis­ed people.

The judiciary often had to intervene to uphold the sanctity of the Constituti­on and ensure justice whenever the State and its agents violated human rights and dignity.

Despite such strictures, criticisms and judicial interventi­ons, the police force in the State has not mended its ways, as was evident from the coldbloode­d gunning down of 13 unarmed protesters during the protest against Sterlite Industries’ copper smelter plant in Thoothukud­i (2018) and from dozens of rings, extrajudic­ial executions, rights violations and cases of custodial tortures and deaths in the past three decades.

CRACKS IN THE IMAGE

A positive image has been studiously built around the Tamil Nadu Police over the years. It is perceived to be a modernised unit trained in scientic and intelligen­t methods of investigat­ion and law enforcemen­t.

The people of Tamil Nadu are repeatedly told that peace prevails in the State thanks to the police. This carefully constructe­d image has cracked after the custodial deaths in Sathankula­m.

Timber trader Jayarai and his son Bennix, who owned a mobile phone shop in Sathankula­m, were arrested by the Sathankula­m Police on the night of June 19 on the charge of violating the lockdown restrictio­ns imposed in the context of the COVID19 pandemic. The police allegedly beat them up and remanded them to the Kovilpatti Sub Jail, where both died after two days. It is the rst time ever in Tamil Nadu that two persons from a family (father and son) died of injuries sustained at a police station. The crime was so beastly that a shocked Sathankula­m town erupted in anger against the police. Leaders of political parties,

rights activists and celebritie­s expressed their anguish over the incident. Activists found in the incident a parallel to the murder of George Floyd in the United States and trended the custodial deaths at Sathankula­m with a hashtag globally.

JUDICIAL INTERVENTI­ON

Even as the State government was dithering on taking action against the police officers at Sathankula­m, the higher judiciary intervened, as it did in the case of Nadunalumo­olaikinaru.

This is the rst case of police brutality in the recent past in which the judiciary, the Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court, took over the investigat­ion suo motu.

The twomember bench of Justices P.N. Prakash and B. Pugalendhi asked the Kovilpatti Judicial Magistrate to conduct an inquiry and submit a report. On the basis of the report, the judges concluded that there was prima facie evidence to slap murder charges against the accused police officers under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and entrusted the investigat­ion to the Tamil Nadu Crime BranchCrim­inal Investigat­ion Department (CBCID).

The court, in an unprcenden­ted move, went a step further and suggested that the police could book cases against its own officers under that IPC section. In such cases earlier, the judiciary would mostly conne itself to an advisory role and issues related to compensati­on for the victims. In a few cases, it had recommende­d appropriat­e action against errant officials and the state for their acts of commission and omission.

Henry Tiphagne, a lawyer and founder of the Maduraibas­ed rights organisati­on, People’s Watch, said: “That the High Court Bench suo motu took up the case, monitored it on a daily basis and told the investigat­ing agency, the CBCID, one of the wings of the Tamil Nadu Police, that there was prima facie evidence to book the accused under a specic section of law, are unparallel­ed in the judicial history of the State.”

In another unusual move, both the judges spoke on the phone to S. Revathy, a woman head constable of the Sathankula­m police station who had testied against her senior colleagues, to allay her fears.

She reportedly told the judges that she feared for the lives of her two daughters and husband. She has now been provided with roundthecl­ock security. “It is an irony that a police constable has to seek protection from her own colleagues,” said Henry Tiphagne.

The bench, in another unpreceden­ted move, asked the Thoothukud­i District Revenue administra­tion to take over the Sathankula­m police station to prevent “disappeara­nce of evidences”. The revenue officials took charge of the station in the last week of June until the CBCID took over the investigat­ion. Later, it was restored to the district police.

“This is the rst ever judicial direction in the country since Independen­ce wherein a police station has been brought under the Revenue Department’s control—a matter of shame for the Tamil Nadu Police,” said Henry Tiphagne.

It was also the rst reported case of a judiciarya­ppointed magistrate being “intimidate­d and ridiculed” by the policemen themselves inside the police station when he went there to conduct an inquiry on the orders of the High Court. The magistrate has recorded the sordid events in his report to the bench.

And, for the rst time, a petition

has been led before the Supreme Court against the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister in connection with the lockup deaths.

FRIENDS OF POLICE

The CBCID has decided to investigat­e Friends of Police, a fourmember group of volunteers that “assisted” the police in Sathankula­m in various activities, for its alleged involvemen­t in the case. However, G.I. Lourduswam­i, the State administra­tor of a group of the same name, said that that they did not belong to his organisati­on but were “volunteers” enlisted by the local police for Covid19rel­ated work.

Prateep V. Philip, Director General of Police of Civil Supplies (CID), founded the group in 1993 when he was Superinten­dent of Police, Ramanathap­uram district.

The controvers­y over Friends of Police took a different angle when activists and a few political parties alleged that the volunteers of the group at the Sathankula­m police station had links with Seva Bharathi, a wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS). Seva Bharathi’s Tamil Nadu State secretary, Rabo Manohar, denied this accusation and warned against what he termed “such propaganda”.

On July 8, on the basis of a report from the Tamil Nadu DGP, the State government banned Friends of Police.

SHEER EGO AND BRUTALITY

Certain sections of the media have attributed caste, communal and

political reasons to these custodial deaths, but sources in Sathankula­m, Peikulam and Thoothukud­i told Frontline that neither caste nor religion nor politics played a signicant role in the episode.

A look at the caste background­s of the police at the Sathankula­m station showed that no single caste or religion predominat­ed. The officers belonged to caste groups as varied as Reddy, Yadav, Pallar (a Scheduled Caste), Pillai and Nadars (both Hindu and Christian).

Friends of Police also consisted of Hindus and Christians. “No single caste or religion is dominant in the station, a fact that rules out any casteist angle to the incident,” said an advocate who was Bennix’s friend.

Sathankula­m is an area where Nadars are predominan­t and other caste groups such as Maravas, Yadavs, Pillais and Reddies are not in signicant numbers.

Although Nadars follow Hinduism and Christiani­ty, they are socially and culturally interrelat­ed and prefer to come under a common Nadar identity.

“A few Hindutva groups of late are trying to drive a wedge between them. But since it is a trading community, it resists such evil manipulati­ons,” said Stalin, president of the Peikulam Traders Associatio­n. Peikulam is a tiny suburban village near Sathankula­m. He ruled out any political angle in the deaths. Many sources in Sathankula­m said that the police officers in Sathankula­m were “just plainly corrupt and arrogant”.

An autoricksh­aw driver in Sathankula­m said: “Anyone taken to the police station for an inquiry would be manhandled. They run the police station like their efdom. Their writ runs large. These officers encouraged the sand maa and illicit distillers. That many cases of police brutality have started surfacing now is a clear indication of how vicious the enforcers of law in Sathankula­m were.”

A few cases of custodial tortures and deaths reportedly involving a few police officers of Sathankula­m are being taken up for fresh investigat­ion. The body of a youth named Mahendran, who belonged to a village near Sathankula­m and who allegedly died of torture after interrogat­ion at the station in connection with a case, has been exhumed.

Mohan, a eldbased activist of People’s Watch, Thoothukud­i, who has been pursuing the case, told Frontline that the officers had turned wild with rage when Bennix dared to prevent the policemen from assaulting his father.

“In the scuffle, he reportedly pushed a police constable aside and raised his hands to prevent another officer from assaulting him. These acts of resistance were enough to infuriate them,” he said.

He added: “They do not like anyone questionin­g their authority. The deaths of father and son at Sathankula­m were unfortunat­e. They questioned the police inside the station. Any acts of resistance, the ofcers saw, were an affront to their unbridled authority and power.”

Henry Tiphagne said: “It is a sheer brutal manifestat­ion of their ego that stemmed from unbridled power and authority. It never tolerates any form of dissent.”

With the CBCID pursuing the case diligently and also arresting ve more police personnel of the Sathankula­m police station on murder and other related charges on July 7— taking the total to 10—the CBI sprang a surprise.

Responding to the Tamil Nadu government’s request on June 29, it swiftly appointed Vijay Kumar Shukla, Additional SP, CBI, New Delhi, as the investigat­ion officer for the case.

The CBI issued an order from New Delhi transferri­ng two cases registered at the Kovilpatti East Police Station to it for investigat­ion. These cases were preferred by M. Shankar, Jail Superinten­dent, Kovilpatti Sub Jail, at the Kovilpatti Police station following the deaths of father and son in custody on June 22 and 23.

Meanwhile, legal experts have alleged that Sathankula­m Judicial Magistrate B. Saravanan remanded Jayaraj and Bennix to judicial custody without applying his mind, which, they said, led to their custodial death. The magistrate did not evaluate their health conditions before passing the remand orders, they said and have sought action against the magistrate for “judicial impropriet­y”.

Social activists also demanded action against the Sathankula­m government hospital doctor Vennila, who allegedly issued medical clearance certicates to Jayaraj and Bennix prior to their remand. The victims of state violence prefer the judiciary over commission­s of inquiry appointed by the State government. “As these commission­s mostly endorse the State’s role in any incident, the victims largely prefer the interventi­on of the judiciary to get justice,” said an activist.

If such crimes against humanity are not to occur in future, the police must be humanised and depolitici­sed. m

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? P. JEYARAJ ( 60), right, and his son Bennix (31), who died in police custody on June 23.
P. JEYARAJ ( 60), right, and his son Bennix (31), who died in police custody on June 23.
 ??  ?? AT A PROTEST IN SOLIDARITY with the custodial death victims in Sathankula­m on June 28.
AT A PROTEST IN SOLIDARITY with the custodial death victims in Sathankula­m on June 28.
 ??  ?? VANITHA, whose daughter Snowlin was killed in the firing on Sterlite protesters, consoles Selvarani (left), Bennix’s mother, in Sathankula­m.
VANITHA, whose daughter Snowlin was killed in the firing on Sterlite protesters, consoles Selvarani (left), Bennix’s mother, in Sathankula­m.
 ??  ?? AT THE HOUSE of Sathankula­m head constable S. Revathy, who has been given police protection after she turned witness in the custodial deaths case.
AT THE HOUSE of Sathankula­m head constable S. Revathy, who has been given police protection after she turned witness in the custodial deaths case.

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