Khaleej Times

Lynching a hate crime, India must enact law to end it

- Likhita Banerjee Thewire.in Likhita Banerji is a researcher with Amnesty Internatio­nal India.

In the US of 1916, when Jim Crow laws of racial segregatio­n were firmly in place, a black teenager was lynched in Waco, Texas. In what would become known as one of the most notorious and gruesome acts of racial violence, Jesse Washington was castrated, tortured and burned for two hours. In a public spectacle, the act was carried out in front of thousands of onlookers and pictures of his charred corpse were circulated as postcards. Washington was the victim of a discrimina­tory crime for allegedly raping and murdering his white employer’s wife, Lucy Fryer.

Cut to December 2017 in India.

On a cold December day in Rajsamand, a district in Rajasthan, a Bengali Muslim migrant labourer, Afrazul Khan, was lynched. In the video of the incident, a man is seen hacking Khan to death with a pickaxe, ignoring his desperate cries for help. The attacker walks up to the camera and proclaims that Khan is guilty of “love jihad”. He then sets Khan on fire. Similar to what happened when Washington was lynched, the killing of Khan became a public spectacle. The act was captured on video and widely circulated. Some individual­s reportedly applauded the act.

The cases of Washington and Khan, despite their disparity in time and space, are disturbing­ly similar. Both men belonged to marginalis­ed groups and were targeted because of their identity. Khan was a Muslim in Hindu-majority India and Washington was a black teenager in the US when laws protecting white supremacy were in place. The murders of both men were made into a chilling spectacle that invited outrage and support (depending on who you asked). In both cases, those responsibl­e for the killings subverted the rule of law, took justice into their own hands and appointed themselves as judge, jury and executione­r.

On July 17, in response to the growing incidents of mob lynching, the Supreme Court advised parliament to come up with a new legislatio­n to address this problem and laid down preventive, remedial and punitive guidelines to combat lynching.

Crimes relating to lynching are commonly known in India by many different names – mob violence, mob lynching, cow vigilantis­m and others. There is no consensus on what the exact definition of such crimes should be. Anecdotall­y, however, what seems to be apparent is that this crime disproport­ionately affects marginalis­ed groups that have historical­ly faced discrimina­tion.

Since September 2015, 600 incidents of such alleged crimes against members of marginalis­ed groups. Many other civil society efforts to document such crimes are reaching similar conclusion­s: Dalits, Muslims, Adivasis, Christians, LGBTQ+ people and others, remain at increased risk of such crimes. The term ‘hate crime’ is generally applied to criminal acts against people based on their real or perceived connection to or membership in a particular group defined by a protected ground under internatio­nal law, such as caste, religion, race, ethnicity, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, among others. Hate crimes, then, are significan­tly different from ordinary crimes because they are motivated by discrimina­tion. That is, the crime is committed against someone because of their identity or the group they belong to.

Hate crimes are crimes which violate the right to equality and nondiscrim­ination. When a hate crime is committed, it is a direct violation of the fundamenta­l rights enshrined in the Indian constituti­on and a violation of internatio­nal human rights law. The rights violated include the right to life, physical integrity, to be free from torture and other illtreatme­nt, and other rights, depending on the facts of the case. As party to several internatio­nal human rights treaties, India has an obligation to not only respect, but also protect the rights of marginalis­ed groups by guaranteei­ng, without discrimina­tion, their right to security of person and protection against violence or bodily harm, whether inflicted by government officials or by any individual, group or institutio­n that targets them because of who they are.

The proposed legislatio­n or amendments to criminal provisions that are to be discussed in India should ensure that authoritie­s are required to investigat­e any potentiall­y discrimina­tory motives where the victims belong to a marginalis­ed group including on the basis of religion, caste, indigenous status, sexual orientatio­n, gender identity and other characteri­stics. This data should be recorded by the National Crime Records Bureau.

Codifying hate crimes not only helps to ensure justice, but more importantl­y, it would be a guarantee to marginalis­ed communitie­s in India.

There is an urgent need for the government, civil society and representa­tives of marginalis­ed groups to get together and work on what the specifics of anti-hate crime measures should look like, including an explicit prohibitio­n of these crimes in law as part of broader policies aimed at eradicatin­g discrimina­tion.

The first thing for authoritie­s to ensure is that the law is broad enough to include all different offences that can be committed with a discrimina­tory motive, and not limit it only to ‘lynching’, as then the law would only address crimes of assault and murder.

Second, due considerat­ion should be given to how hate crimes would be incorporat­ed in criminal codes. One way is to recognise hate crime as a distinct form of crime. Another could be to consider the discrimina­tory motivation as an aggravatin­g factor to existing crimes.

Dealing with hate crimes requires a comprehens­ive approach where the criminal justice system – from the police to prosecutin­g and judicial authoritie­s – is well trained to document these crimes and listen to the victims. To ensure this, a possible legislatio­n should, at the offset, recognise that many of these ‘lynchings’ are hate crimes and should consider them as such. —

When a hate crime is committed, it is a direct violation of the fundamenta­l rights enshrined in the Indian constituti­on and a violation of internatio­nal human rights law

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