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October 9, 2000

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Varsha Bhosle

The silence of the lambs

On October 29, 1997, in Michigan, Ronnie Greene Jr was shot dead by Nathaniel Abraham. The murderer was arrested two days later and sent to a correction facility to await his trial on January 13, 2000. Against the strong protest of the prosecution, the murderer will be released in 2005 at the age of 21. For Nathaniel was just 13 years old when he took a life and was America's youngest murder defendant.

Nathaniel's case gained national attention because he became the first child charged with first-degree murder to be prosecuted under a 1997 Michigan law that allows adult prosecutions of children of any age in serious felony cases. Though he was convicted of an adult charge of second-degree murder, the judge called the law under which he was charged "fundamentally flawed". "While there is no guarantee Nathaniel will be rehabilitated at 21, it is clear 10 years is enough to accomplish this goal," said Judge Eugene Moore and rejected the option of sentencing him to an adult prison and remanded him to juvenile detention.

In his ruling, Judge Moore said society should be committed to preventing future criminal behavior: "The real solution is to prevent an adult criminal population ever from coming into existence." Among those who endorse such views is the US Supreme Court: "Youth crime as such is not the offender's fault; offense by the young also represents a failure in the family, school and the social system, which share the responsibility for the development of America's youth."

Amnesty International -- that vanguard of Indian liberals -- states that "public shock and outrage at violent crimes by children have increasingly been expressed in calls for tougher punishments... What receives far less attention is the way justice systems the world over are violating the basic human rights of children who come into contact with the law. They are held in prisons in inhuman and degrading conditions... They are given sentences which disregard the key principles of juvenile justice -- rehabilitation and the primacy of the well-being of the child."

The Committee on the Rights of the Child monitors the performance of states in respecting the rights of children. It states that children "should be held separately from adults, and have the right to maintain contact with their families and to legal assistance; and guarantees the right to a fair trial. It also obliges governments to promote laws, procedures, institutions and policies specifically applicable to children, such as using alternatives to judicial proceedings and institutional care where appropriate to the child's well-being."

The CRC is applicable to all persons below the age of 18, unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is reached earlier. The minimum age of criminal responsibility -- the age below which children are deemed too young to be legally responsible for their actions and face criminal charges -- varies from country to country. In no country is a boy of 13 legally an adult.

Now, ponder the deathly silence of all the human rights advocates of India, our ultra liberals, our secular activists, on the 14-year imprisonment of a tribal boy not yet quite into his teens. Last week, Sudarshan Hansda aka Chenchu was sentenced for being part of the mob that killed the Australian missionary, Graham Staines, and his two minor sons. The Bhubaneswar juvenile court said: "If Hindu mythology can be of any help in this case, this is the land where dreaded dacoit Ratnakara was transformed into Valmiki and as such, this Court has faith and belief that the Superintendent Juvenile Home, Angul, will nurture and display to the world outside the gradual transformation of Chenchu Hansda to a Valmiki." And then the court ruled that the 13-year-old Chenchu would not be sent to a special home because "it will not be in the interest of other juveniles of that special home since it will have contaminating effect on other juveniles." Therefore, the boy will spend 14 years among hardboiled criminals.

It has been established that on the night of January 22, 1999, a mob led by chief suspect Dara Singh torched the jeep in which Staines and his two sons were sleeping. A mob -- i e, a crowd, horde, mass... Chenchu's lawyer, Gyanendra Acharya, says, "The punishment is illegal and erroneous. Hansda is innocent and he did not commit the crime for which he has been sentenced. The CBI had examined around 90 witnesses of whom only 13 have been named in the charge sheet. During cross-examination, all of them denied having seen him committing the crime. His name was also not mentioned in the first complaint lodged with the police after the incident. The Juvenile Justice Act (section 21 and 22), which describes the punishment for a juvenile delinquent, says that either a convict be confined for 3 years or till he attains the age of 18."

The victims of Keonjhar were White, Christian and Australian. The murderer is Brown, Hindu and Indian. The court for juvenile crime consisted of Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate Sukumar Sahoo and Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate G Mahapatra. The man who composed the report on the Hindu-Muslim Bombay riots of 1992-93 was Justice Srikrishna.

Eighteen persons were charged with the Staines murders. Of them, the trial of 14, including Dara Singh, is scheduled to begin in the sessions court of Bhubaneswar from December 1, while 3 are absconding. Chenchu's is the first conviction in the case.

Do I feeeel for Chenchu like my tender-hearted colleagues feeeeel for even jailed terrorists? No. Hypocrisy is the art of professing virtues one does not hold, and I'm happily deficient in all the arts. I'm aware how mature today's 13 year old can be. I believe that if an adolescent burns alive one adult, forget two children, he should jolly well be hanged. I'm with the US and all those "developed" nations who are re-thinking their juvenile justice system: All 6 Australian states abandoned the welfare model of juvenile justice during the 80s and adopted an alternative "justice model" that emphasises accountability. Goaded by cries for tougher crime control, Canada abolished the concept of delinquency with the Young Offenders Act of 1984 and introduced proportional sentencing for young offenders. England replaced all juvenile courts in 1992 with "youth courts" that focus on offender accountability.

But I'm not a human rights jehadi! I haven't cried when the police thrust needles into the eyes of prisoners. I don't weep over the brutal beating of a teenaged boy in a police station. The stream of brutality that flows past us 24 hours a day, seven days a week, all year round, leaves me untouched. I can't remember any lump forming in my throat when I've listened to tales of woe. I rub my hands with satisfaction when I read about under-aged gun-toting separatists shot dead in army encounters. For I'm from the "other" side -- the communalist-divisive-fundamentalist darkness that is Veer Savarkar's (and not the Sangh Parivar's) Hindutva. And therefore, I want someone to tell me why Chenchu's incarceration needs no comment from our liberals.

"How to be a civil libertarian" states that the difficulty level for becoming one is "medium" and the "Time Required: A lifetime." Among its guidelines are:

  • Keep in mind that freedom is of utmost importance especially when it's inconvenient.
  • Be consistent. There are freedoms that you favor and freedoms you don't. The right to be left alone applies to them all, equally.
  • Be consistent. There are people who you favor and people you don't. Respect for the rights of folks you despise is at the root of freedom.
  • Don't sell out one right to help another -- you lose allies that way and will lose the whole cause in time.
  • Never let somebody convince you that the current political system is more important than specific rights. People will be here long after the government falls.

    Do you see what I mean...? In September, Mamata Banerjee charged the CPI-M with targetting the children of her party activists who were killed in clashes with the Communists ruling West Bengal. "What can be worse and more brutal? They don't spare even the innocent children! These children lost their parents. A mission comes to their help on humanitarian grounds. But the CPI-M goons are now demanding the mission should stop their relief camps and hand over the children to them," she said.

    The mission in question is the Ramakrishna Mission, a philanthropic Hindu organisation which runs several schools, hospitals and orphanages all over India. It had opened a relief camp at Jairambati, a small village in Bankura, for victims of political clashes in the state and gave shelter to 80 children whose parents had fallen victim to the ruling CPI-M cadres' violence. Did you see any column highlighting the characteristics of the pinko party -- as is frequently done with the "rabble" that makes up the Shiv Sena...? Umm... the Trinamul Congress is an ally of the BJP... So much for consistency...

    The Telegraph of September 19 reported: "The silence of the graveyard still reigns at Jairambati Matri Mandir, the birthplace of Ma Sarada. There are few pilgrims at the temple, usually brimming with people at this time. On September 6, over 2,000 people had taken shelter in the temple after a Trinamul Congress worker and a BJP activist were killed allegedly by CPI-M supporters... Looting and arson continued through the day. Since then, Jairambati has worn a deserted look... Aneyananda Maharaj, the temple-in-charge, shudders as he recalls the fateful day. Terror-stricken people had made a beeline for the ashram since early morning. 'Hearing the sound of bombs and screams of helpless people, I asked the gatekeeper to open the door... We received constant threats over phone even after everyone except for a few old people had vacated the temple'."

    There were no screams from our numerous human rights groups and our secular jehadis of the Press, from our devotees of Amnesty International and HR Watch. For the refugees weren't Christians or Muslims. What would have been the reaction if this had happened to a Christian-run school or a madarsa...?

    So no, there will be no protest over Chenchu Hansda's plight -- especially from those who push and support the rights of the "animist" tribals :-). Nobody will mull over whether the boy had a school to attend or a family to fail him. There will be no word on the inhuman and degrading conditions of prisons, no regard for the key principle of the primacy of the well-being of a child. For Chenchu -- if he actually did light the match that burnt the three Christians -- was with a Hindu mob. In India, all that jazz about fundamental and religious rights is merely politics. Specifically, vote-bank politics. And hence, the silence of the lambs.

    Varsha Bhosle

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