Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Jailed for sedition, 15 men hit, made to clean toilets

The men who allegedly celebrated Pak victory say jail inmates were hostile towards them

- Neeraj Santoshi n letters@hindustant­imes.com

We were made to clean toilets and drains in the Khandwa jail and were called traitors by inmates. In jail, nearly a dozen senior jail inmates slapped each one of us and abused us MANSOORI, one of the 15 jailed men Before the magistrate, each one them have stated that they were not beaten. We are probing the matter and as fresh facts come out, we will accordingl­y take action against whosoever is guilty RRS PARIHAT, SP, Burhanpur

MOHADVILLA­GE(BURHANPUR): Their ordeal is over, but not the nightmare. Having spent 10-odd days in jail for allegedly celebratin­g Pakistan’s victory over India in the Champions Trophy, Anees Babu Mansoori shudders at what he had to endure in prison.

“We were made to clean toilets and drains in the Khandwa jail and were called traitors by inmates. In jail, nearly a dozen senior jail inmates slapped each one of us and abused us,” said Mansoori, a tailor by profession.

Mansoori was among 15 locals of Burhanpur — some 350km from Bhopal — who were arrested and charged with sedition hours after India lost to Pakistan on June 18. The police claimed the Muslim men had burst crackers and shouted proPakista­n slogans after the match.

“We did not,” says Mansoori, standing up to show bruises on his leg due to alleged beating by the police. “We are Muslims, but also Indians,” the 25-year-old insisted.

Villagers agree, saying the police cases were trumped up. They say a few crackers were burst that night but none is sure who was behind them. No one is also sure why the crackers went off, or to celebrate what.

The arrests and sedition charges against the 15 men triggered nationwide outrage, prompting the police to drop the charge a week later. But for the men, granted bail by the court on June 27 and let out of the jail the next day, the scars still remain.

The worst treatment was reportedly meted out to Sarfaraz Khan, a farmer whose first name is similar to that of Pakistan’s cricket captain Sarfraz Ahmed. “They had fun with me as for them, I was the captain. I was beaten up mercilessl­y by the police. In jail the inmates did the same,” he told Hindustan Times.

He and the other men alleged the inmates were particular­ly hostile to them as they faced sedition charges. Idbar Gulzar Tadvi, 24, says the incarcerat­ion is going to hurt him for a long time. The cotton crop he was growing has wilted while he was behind bars.

“Most of us work in the fields as farmers or labourers. We have the most to lose,” he said.

Even Mansoori forsees a bleak future. “I am a Bachelor in Education and I had applied for a job in the forest department. I was about to apply for a job with the police as well. Now, with such charges, who will give me a job,” he asked.

As the men stare at an uncertain future, they also speculate over the reasons why the police picked them up and branded them anti-nationals.

The police had used complainan­t Subhash Laxman Koli to book the men. But Koli has since retracted his statement in court and emerged as the hero of the village.

According to him, the police slapped him and forced him to sign some papers.

“It is only the next day I realised that I was made the complainan­t when I read my name in the local papers,” Koli said. “Police tried to intimidate me, but I told the truth in the court statement. If something happens to me, police will be responsibl­e.” Though forced to drop the more serious sedition charge, RRS Parihat, the superinten­dent of police for Burhanpur, denied any wrongdoing.

“Before the magistrate, each one them have stated that they were not beaten. We are investigat­ing the matter and as fresh facts come out, we will accordingl­y take action against whosoever is guilty,” he told Hindustan Times.

As the findings are awaited, villagers including Sarfaraz’s father Rashid Khan, suspect a conspiracy to sow communal discord in the village.

“During the communal riots of 1992 and 2008 in Burhanpur, our village remained untouched. What changed this time needs to be investigat­ed,” he said.

 ??  ?? (Right) Tailor Mansoori, who was one of the 15 men incarcerat­ed, shows bruises on his leg due to alleged beating by police. Villagers say a n › few crackers were burst the night when India lost the Champions Trophy but none is sure who was behind them....
(Right) Tailor Mansoori, who was one of the 15 men incarcerat­ed, shows bruises on his leg due to alleged beating by police. Villagers say a n › few crackers were burst the night when India lost the Champions Trophy but none is sure who was behind them....
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