Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Old pain, just in new bottles

The commission probing the Muzaffarna­gar riots absolves the UP government of all blame

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The fate of commission­s of inquiry into riots in India runs to a predictabl­e pattern. They either become political weapons in the hands of different parties, are pushed into the background to be used now and then or are quickly moved to a dusty shelf. And so the course taken by the Justice Vishnu Sahai Commission of inquiry into the Muzaffarna­gar riots in UP in 2013 comes as no surprise. For a start, it has become an easy political bait as the Commission absolves the local political adminstrat­ion of any blame. The Akhilesh Yadav government, it says, was not responsibl­e for the fateful riots in which at least 62 people were killed and 60,000 rendered homeless.

The claims and counter claims about responsibi­lity began almost as soon as the riots subsided. Now, after much meandering, the Commission has said that it was a local intelligen­ce failure and police and administra­tive lapses that led the riots to spiral out of control. And top Samajwadi Party leader Azam Khan has added his bit by saying that it was also the responsibi­lity of the local media, which exaggerate­d the reporting of the riots. His logic is inexplicab­le when he says that in America pictures of dead bodies and bloodshed cannot be shown. There can be no doubt that the Akhilesh Yadav government must bear responsibi­lity for the manner in which a skirmish was allowed to escalate into such horrifying riots, and also why it was so tardy in its efforts to provide succour to the victims. The Centre cannot also wash its hands of the issue. In fact, while the homeless were herded into makeshift tents in the dead of winter, the state government held filmy soirees and people like Azam Khan undertook ‘study tours’ abroad. The BJP has leapt into the fray, accusing the SP of tarnishing its image, the Congress has accused the SP of playing politics and trying to save its skin and so the blame game goes on.

The effect of such political buck passing and the fact that it is only local officials and mysterious intelligen­ce failures which have been responsibl­e for so much havoc mean that many of the perpetrato­rs will never be brought to book. This really undermines public faith in such commission­s of inquiry. They do not seem to be time-bound and are ultimately a waste of the taxpayer’s money. The fate of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, the Bhiwandi riots and countless more are still embroiled in controvers­y. The latest one will only add to public disillusio­nment with the method of enquiries into instances of mass violence.

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