The Asian Age

It’s topsy-turvy in UP

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Things are indeed topsy-turvy in Uttar Pradesh. A rape survivor is in jail while the alleged rapist, a former Union minister, is in hospital, ostensibly because he’s too ill to be in judicial custody. Doctors may have a different medical opinion about Swami Chinmayana­nd, but he enjoys the privileges of being given the maximum leeway by the Yogi Adityanath government. The case took a startling turn with the police taking the alleged extortioni­sts, including the rape survivor who is a law student and her three friends, into custody saying they had confessed. The charges were brought against the rape survivor on the strength of a complaint, not by Chinmayana­nd but by others against the alleged blackmaile­rs. This is the state of affairs in India’s biggest state, which sends the most MPs to Parliament.

The string of episodes in the Chinmayana­nd saga would have made an intriguing plot for a Kafkaesque novel or film screenplay if not for the original sin of rape committed in the real world by another person in a position of influence. How the establishm­ent sprang to shield him after the details were revealed doesn’t surprise us because of the state where the incidents took place. UP has a history of government­s being at the beck and call of ruling politician­s, caged parrots aplenty. The politician in seen as a bridge between the BJP and its supporters with a host of schools and colleges, while heading an akhara. Only a Supreme Courtmonit­ored inquiry might bring out all the facts. Rape is rape, regardless of extortion after it, and if guilty the swami must even hang by the new punishment­s possible in the laws against rapists.

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