Nelson Mail

Court blocks police bid to move activists India

-

India’s top court ordered yesterday that five prominent rights activists arrested for alleged Maoist links be kept under house arrest instead of police custody until it rules next week on a petition challengin­g their detention.

Police, meanwhile, broke up a protest in southern India against the arrests and detained about two dozen people.

Attorney Prashant Bhushan said the court order will prevent police from taking the five to the western city of Pune, where authoritie­s are investigat­ing their alleged links to Maoist rebels in various parts of the country.

The Supreme Court also ordered the federal and state government­s to provide detailed reasons for their arrests by September 5. It set September 6 for the next hearing in the case.

Those arrested on Tuesday were Telugulang­uage poet Varavara Rao in Hyderabad, Vernon Gonzalves and Arun Farreira in Mumbai, and Gautam Navalakha and Sudha Bhardwaj in New Delhi and a neighbouri­ng town.

Police accused the five of delivering speeches that triggered protests and violence between low-caste Dalits and right-wing groups near Pune in December.

The justices asked prosecutor­s why the police have taken eight months after the incident to arrest the five activists. They said the activists were reputed citizens and stifling the dissent was not good.

‘‘Dissent is the safety valve of democracy and if you don’t allow these safety valves, it will burst,’’ the Press Trust of India news agency quoted Chief Justice Dipak Mishra and Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachu­d as saying during court proceeding­s.

The government says Maoist rebels, who are active in several states, are India’s biggest internal security threat. The rebels, inspired by Chinese revolution­ary leader Mao Zedong, have been fighting the government for more than four decades, demanding land and jobs for the poor and indigenous communitie­s.

Participan­ts in the protest in Hyderabad in southern India chanted slogans against the arrests, calling them a violation of fundamenta­l rights. Police broke up the demonstrat­ion and forced the protesters into police buses.

The arrests of the five activists were condemned by Amnesty Internatio­nal, which said they have worked to protect the rights of some of India’s most poor and marginalis­ed people.

In June, police arrested five other activists on suspicion of also inciting the Dalits, who have been marginalis­ed for centuries and forced to perform jobs considered unacceptab­le by other castes. Caste prejudice is endemic in Hindumajor­ity India, even though the constituti­on outlaws the practice.

 ?? AP ?? Indian police detain an activist, carrying a child, during a protest against the arrest of revolution­ary writer Varavara Rao and other activists, in Hyderabad, India.
AP Indian police detain an activist, carrying a child, during a protest against the arrest of revolution­ary writer Varavara Rao and other activists, in Hyderabad, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand