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April 27, 2009 The response Can there be a bigger constitutional slap on
the face of a constitutional functionary? Earlier, the court transferred all
cases out of There had been a convention to raise the This is a big success for us. This is not against the
Gulbarg Society massacre but on the wider conspiracy to allow violence to wrack
Teesta Setalvad, Activist The history of riots in our country is that the perpetrators are never caught and victims never get justice. This order indicates the rule of law will always prevail. Tanvir Jafri, Son of the late Ehsan Jafri “Write this,” Qasambhai Allahnoor Mansoori instructed. “My mother, my wife, my daughter, son, three daughters-in-law, six grandchildren... 19 people. Do you even know what that is like?” The 66-year-old resident of Gulbarg Society lived to count the dead in his family. But memories of the gruesome massacre that took place in the locality he lived in for nearly four decades have not managed to drive him out of his now dilapidated house in Gulbarg Society. This locality — a cluster of 29 bungalows and apartments, in Ahmedabad city’s Dalit-dominated Chamanpura area — saw incidents of arson and looting during the communal riots of 1969, the 1989 anti-reservation protests and the post-Babri Masjid demolition riots in 1992. Many residents moved out after that but some people stayed back, only to leave in 2002. On a broad street outside, bakers and retailers of electronic goods go about their businesses. But enter through a collapsing grey gate and you see a place caught in a time warp. Seven years later, these houses stand abandoned. There are no buyers and former residents, mostly retailers of consumer durables and tailors, don’t want to return. A few homeless labourers have made these ruins their home and the mosque on the premises is still open for prayer. Only memories No one lives here anymore: Gulbarg Society was once a lively locality — comprising 19 bungalows and 10 apartment buildings housing upper middle class business families — located in a predominantly Hindu area in Ahmedabad. Today, seven years after the massacre that left 38 of its residents dead and almost as many missing, it resembles a ghost town. Those who survived the massacre moved out. Their homes stand abandoned. Mansoori is the only sign of what used to be before a mob killed 38 people (if those missing are officially presumed dead, the count would rise to 70) here. The dead include former Congress Member of Parliament Ehsan Jafri, who was hacked and burnt to death. Jafri used his influence and called everyone he knew in the police and political set-up, begging for help when a 10,000 to 12,000-strong mob attacked the locality, breaking its boundary wall and torching houses. When no help came, Jafri opened fire from his 12-bore licensed double-barrel shotgun to disperse the mob, injuring four persons. The mob, now uncontrollable, entered each house, attacking residents with swords and choppers and burning them alive. After the incident, in an apparent attempt to destroy evidence, the police did not get post-mortem conducted on most of those killed. With this crucial piece of evidence missing, most of the 40 accused were released on bail. And while the Special Investigation Team (SIT) has already found through cellphone records that then Joint Commissioner of Police (Sector II) M.K. Tandon, under whose jurisdiction the massacre happened, was present at the spot when the mob assembled but left immediately after the attack, no action has been taken against him. The only high-ranking police officer to be arrested in the case by the SIT is Deputy Superintendent of Police (Valsad) K.G. Erda, who was then a senior police inspector of the area. He was arrested earlier this month for abetment and destruction of evidence. “Erda should reveal the names of his colleagues and all those involved,” said Jafri’s 46-year-old son Tanvir, who survived because he was not at home. “Our society was hardly two to three kilometers from the police commissioner’s office. Somebody has to answer for what went wrong.” Riot victims Riot victims light candles for their loved ones at their abandoned home in Gulbarg Society. PTI file photo “The police could not cover such a small housing society,” Mansoori asked. “What would Erda have done when all orders came from the top?” After spending four months in a relief camp, Mansoori returned to Gulbarg though his sons, who also survived the massacre, refused to return. In his old house, photographs of his wife and family keep him company. Once a driver, he now earns a living by renting out handcarts to hawkers. His son has a business selling mattresses. Mansoori hopes the SIT’s investigations will lead to the conspirators being booked. “That will act as a deterrent to others,” he said. Tanvir, too, is positive but feels much more needs to be
done and fast. “That Erda and (M.K.) Patel have been taken into custody is a
very good sign but they were only inspectors then,” said Tanvir, who now lives
in That is a question all victims are asking. This report appeared in HT on February 21 this year Posted by c-info at Wednesday, April 29, 2009 http://communalism.blogspot.com/2009/04/gujarat-ray-of-light-in-gulbarg-gloom.html |
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