FrontLine

Shocking verdict

- BY ANUPAMA KATAKAM

A special court sentences 38 persons to death for the 2008 Ahmedabad blasts, leading to widespread outrage among human rights activists and comparison­s being made with the verdict in the 2002

Gujarat pogrom cases.

GUJARAT witnessed the bloodiest and most brutal riots in recent history in 2002 in which more than 2,000 people were killed over a period of three months across the State. Heinous crimes against humanity were committed during that period. However, not one of the 150odd persons convicted for the riots was sentenced to death. In 2008, a series of bomb blasts in Ahmedabad killed 56 people. Of the 49 convicted in the case, 38 persons have now been given capital punishment.

Declaring the case as the “rarest of the rare”, Judge Ambalal Patel, of a special court hearing the 2008

Ahmedabad serial blasts case, on February 19 sentenced 38 men to death by hanging and condemned the remaining 11 to life imprisonme­nt. The judgment itself is rare, and also unpreceden­ted. Defence lawyers said that never before had so many convicted in a single case been given capital punishment. The only other case in which a large number of persons were sent to the gallows was the Rajiv Gandhi assassinat­ion case; in 1998 a special court sentenced 26 persons for being part of a conspiracy to kill the former Prime Minister.

The death penalty verdict in the Ahmedabad blasts case has raised the hackles of human rights activists and Muslim community leaders in Gujarat. To begin with, they said, the country needs to take a hard look at doling out the death penalty so freely. Second, they added, in a State where the perpetrato­rs of the 2002 communal pogrom roam free, it is certainly questionab­le why such a large number of Muslims have been given the harshest punishment in the law.

When the verdict was delivered, many people in Ahmedabad were seen celebratin­g. The Gujarat Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) official Twitter handle posted a caricature

showing a group of men wearing skullcaps being hanged together, with the national motto, Satyameva Jayate. A lawyer and activist involved in the case said that the distastefu­l and irresponsi­ble reaction was sadly a reflection of how the right wing has successful­ly polarised the State. He added that the timing of the verdict was also questionab­le and wondered if the hastening of the judgment was related to several other States being in election mode.

Lawyers in Ahmedabad said the 7,015-page judgment gave capital punishment to the 38 persons under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). Additional­ly, the convicted were charged under Sections 10 and 16 (1) 9a), (b) of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. The judgment also levied a fine of Rs.2.4 lakh on each of those sentenced. The court said that the money would go towards compensati­ng the families of the 56 victims who died in the blasts.

Riaz Pathan (name changed), a lawyer and activist in Ahmedabad, said: “This investigat­ion was done under a lot of secrecy. We tried to track it but received sketchy informatio­n from the authoritie­s. We do not believe there is substantia­l evidence to incarcerat­e many of the accused.”

He added: “Unfortunat­ely, due to the lack of material we could not authentica­te anything. We believe a lot of the evidence was gathered from hearsay that suited the government’s agenda. One man turned approver. His testimony supposedly led to the arrest of suspects from all over the country. There needs to be far more transparen­cy and substantia­l evidence, especially in a case [in] which [convicts] can be given death.”

AHMEDABAD BLASTS

The Ahmedabad blasts case involved a series of explosions that took place in the city on July 26, 2008. In a span of about an hour, 21 bombs exploded in several parts of the city, including at the massive Civil Hospital. Local residents said that there did not appear to be a pattern behind the planting of explosives. Some went off on buses, a few in parked vehicles, and a few were found in public garbage bins. According to official figures, 56 people died and about 200 were injured. The next day, as many as 17 bombs were found in Surat. In the following days, 11 more devices were discovered in the city. In Surat the bombs were placed in highly congested areas and could have caused heavy damage. None of them exploded owing to faulty wiring of the integrated circuit chips.

At the time, police authoritie­s told the media that minutes before the bombs exploded, a television channel received an email of what it said was an extract from a 14-page manifesto of an unknown terror outfit called the Indian Mujahideen. The police said the email, titled “Rise of Jihad”, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. According to the police, the email said that the outfit was “raising the illustriou­s banner of jehad against the Hindus and all those who fight and resist us, and here we begin our revenge with the help and Permission of Allah a terrifying revenge of our blood, our lives and our honour that will Inshah Allah terminate your survival on this land.”

Another militant group called Harkat-ul-jihad-al-islami also apparently claimed responsibi­lity, but the authoritie­s did not release informatio­n on this organisati­on.

Several people interviewe­d soon after the explosions said that they felt the blasts were in retaliatio­n to the 2002 pogrom. Moreover, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was then the Gujarat Chief Minister, had been boasting about terrorists not daring to enter Gujarat. It was believed that the militants were trying to send him and his party a message.

A political science researcher in Ahmedabad said that post-2014 (when the BJP came to power at the Centre and Modi became Prime Minister), there had been little ‘militant activity’. “Either they have genuinely been wiped out or it was a case of raising the bogey, creating a fear psychosis that helped achieve a political agenda,” the researcher said. The scholar added: “Unfortunat­ely, over time the Hindu right wing in Gujarat has steadily dismantled and reduced the Muslim population to a section that is extremely scared and defenceles­s. Verdicts such as these make one wonder whether militant groups exist or whether it is part of a conspiracy to further persecute Muslims while leveraging political gains.”

INVESTIGAT­IONS AND ARRESTS

Forensic experts concluded that the improvised explosive devices (IEDS) used in Ahmedabad and Surat were identical in design to those used in the May 2008 serial bombings in Jaipur; the November 2007 attacks on trial court buildings in Lucknow, Varanasi and Faizabad; the August 2007 bombings in Hyderabad; and the March 2006 attack in Varanasi. Furthermor­e, the Indian Mujahideen sent emails to the authoritie­s in these cities, in much the same way it did before the Ahmedabad blasts. The Gujarat Police said: “Evidence suggests that either the same bomb-makers built the IEDS or the people who made them were trained by the same experts.”

Investigat­ors from Gujarat’s crime branch told the media at the time that the emails purportedl­y sent out by the outfit contained images from the Gujarat riots of 2002 and claimed that the bombings were revenge for the communal violence and for the destructio­n of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya in 1992. Additional­ly, forensic evidence gathered from the material used to assemble the bombs led them to conclude that similar cocktails of chemicals were used by the banned Students’ Islamic

Movement of India (SIMI) and they believed that the Indian Mujahideen was a regrouping of SIMI members.

Riaz Pathan and other activists who have been monitoring the communalis­ation in the State said that for days the police had no leads or informatio­n about who had planted the bomb. They would release bits of informatio­n, but it was apparent that they were floundering. In fact, an activist said, some bombs were found in garbage dumps or parks. He asked: “Which sophistica­ted terrorist would plant a bomb in garbage?”

The Gujarat Police claimed that they made a big breakthrou­gh when a police constable called them to say he saw two of the cars that were used in the bomb blasts in a house in Bharuch city. When they traced the ownership of the cars, they found that it belonged to two men they suspected were involved with Indian Mujahideen.

Between 2010 and 2017, the police arrested 78 persons from Kerala, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtr­a and Karnataka. Among the accused were several SIMI activists, according to the police. Families of the convicted persons, including Safdar Nagori, a SIMI leader who apparently showed no remorse during the death sentencing, said that their relatives were innocent and that their connection to the blasts was fabricated.

Riaz Pathan said: “They come from poor or modest means. It’s the same situation where they do not have the resources to defend themselves, so they languish as undertrial­s for years and years.”

There were several twists and turns in the trial, including a jailbreak attempt by the accused in 2013. News reports stated that 14 prisoners in this case were booked for digging a 213-foot-long tunnel while they were in Sabarmati Central Jail. The special court saw eight judges preside over the trial.

20 YEARS SINCE GODHRA

Significantly, February 27 and 28, 2022, marked 20 years since the Gujarat communal pogrom happened. According to official figures, about 1,000 people died and 233 went missing, but according to unofficial estimates, the deaths were closer to 2,000 and the number of missing almost double.

Brutal riots broke out across the State after a coach of Sabarmati Express with kar sevaks returning from Ayodhya was set on fire. Civic and human rights groups gathered evidence over the years and claimed that the violence was premeditat­ed.

The Gujarat riots came down to nine main cases. Barring the Naroda Gam and Gulberg Society case, the remaining have been closed and verdicts pronounced in them led to the arrest of several senior politician­s, police officials and local thugs. In spite of crimes such as raping women, killing children, burning people alive on the road, and looting houses, no one among those convicted was given capital punishment.

Riaz Pathan said: “Not only has Maya Kodnani been set free, Amit Shah is today the second most powerful man in the country. Both were charged in riot cases.”

For instance, in the Naroda Gam area of Ahmedabad, 97 people were killed in a massacre led by rightwinge­rs. Eyewitness­es said at the time that BJP Minister Maya Kodnani was seen in the area issuing instructio­ns to the rampaging mob. In August 2012, the special court sentenced 32 persons, including Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi, a notorious Bajrang Dal member, to 28 years in jail.

In 2018, Maya Kodnani and 29 others were acquitted for want of evidence. Bajrangi was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt. The Supreme Court granted him medical bail in 2019, and he has never returned to prison. Regarding the verdict in the Ahmedabad blasts case, Father Cedric Prakash, who sheltered many members of the Muslim community during the dark days of the riots, said: “The biggest perpetrato­rs and the mastermind­s of this crime against humanity [2002 riots] still roam the streets fearlessly as they continue to mainstream their fascist agenda of hate and vilification, of divisivene­ss and denigratio­n, of exclusiven­ess and violence. Some of the lynchpins today rule the country. They have succeeded in generating a palpable fear in the hearts and minds of millions through their anti-constituti­onal methods of falsehood and vindictive­ness.”

He added: “None of the perpetrato­rs of this bloodiest chapter in the history of independen­t India were given the death penalty or for that matter even exemplary punishment. Some key persons who were convicted and sent to jail were in a matter of time even released on bail. Today, they enjoy their freedom protected by the most powerful of the land. That is the pathetic state of our criminal justice system.”

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